Naturally!

 

Bruce

 

 

 

 


 <http://www.latimes.com/> latimes.com

 

  _____  

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/wire/ats-ap_top14jan05,1,4838
532.story?coll=sns-ap-topnews


Somalia's Islamists Vow to Heed al-Qaida


By ELIZABETH A. KENNEDY
Associated Press Writer

11:47 AM PST, January 5, 2007

MOGADISHU, Somalia - Islamic fighters hiding in Mogadishu since their
movement's main force was driven from the Somali capital say they will heed
al-Qaida's call for guerrilla attacks and suicide bombings against Ethiopian
troops whose intervention was key to the Islamists' defeat. 

"I am committed to die for the sake of my religion and the al-Qaida deputy's
speech only encourages me to go ahead with my holy war," 18-year-old Sahal
Abdi told The Associated Press, referring to an audio message posted on the
Internet on Friday. 

Troops of Somalia's transitional government, backed by the Ethiopian
military, routed the Islamic militia from much of southern Somalia, ending
their six months in power. The group had brought a semblance of stability
here but terrified residents with a version of Quranic rule that included
public executions and floggings of criminals. 

Interviews with militants who fought with the Council of Islamic Courts and
went underground when most of their comrades fled Mogadishu last week
suggest their movement is fractured and cut off from its leaders but still
motivated for battle. 

Somalia's interior minister says 3,500 fighters are hiding around the
capital, raising the specter of an Iraq-style guerrilla war as diplomats
meeting in neighboring Kenya agreed Friday on a plan to raise a foreign
peacekeeping force for Somalia. 

AP contacted several militants by telephone after townspeople identified
them as former fighters known from the months when the Islamic movement
controlled Mogadishu. None of those interviewed were leaders and said they
are now moving house to house, staying with friends and relatives. 

They acknowledged being fighters but refused to be photographed and, in some
cases, to give their full names, fearing reprisals from government or
Ethiopian troops, although they insisted they hope the movement they served
as foot soldiers will rise again. 

"The call from the al-Qaida deputy leader is based on Islam and we are
adamant in our religion," said Sheik Musa, who would not identify himself
further. "There is no option but to heed his call." 

Al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden's deputy, Ayman al-Zawahri, urged the
Islamic movement's fighters and other Muslims to attack the troops of
Christian-dominated Ethiopia, which he called a "crusader" invasion force. 

"Launch ambushes, land mines, raids and suicidal combats until you consume
them as the lions and eat their prey," al-Zawahri said in the taped message
that aired on a Web site frequently used by militants and carried the logo
of al-Qaida's media production wing, al-Sahab. 

Ethiopia, a U.S. ally, has fought two wars with predominantly Muslim
Somalia, most recently in 1977, and the Islamic movement has invoked
traditional hatreds to rally its supporters. 

"This country should be ruled by Islamic law and I am a Muslim," said Ali
Yare, a 35-year-old who expressed pride in the work he did with the Islamic
courts militia. 

It was not clear what kind of weapons the men have at their disposal, but
grenades, mortars and Kalashnikov assault rifles are readily available at
the city's Bakaara Market. 

Al-Qaida's call for revenge came at a precarious time for Somalia's
government, which controlled one town before Ethiopia stepped in with MiG
fighter jets, tanks and well-trained soldiers. 

Ethiopia now wants to pull its force out in a few weeks, saying its soldiers
cannot be peacekeepers and it cannot afford for them to stay. Somalia is
trying to train its own military and police while the plan for an
international force is put in place. 

On Friday, Prime Minister Ali Mohamed Gedi welcomed back into his army more
than 1,000 men who once served under Mohamed Siad Barre, a military dictator
whose ouster at the hands of clan-based warlords in 1991 plunged the country
into 15 years of anarchy. Most of the men appeared to be well over 50. 

A meeting of U.S., European Union, African and Arab diplomats ended in Kenya
on Friday with a U.S. pledge to provide $40 million to Somalia in political,
humanitarian and peacekeeping assistance, and a plan to ask more African
nations to send troops to help stabilize the country. Uganda has pledged at
least 1,000 peacekeepers. 

The EU said it would also help pay for a peacekeeping force envisioned at
8,000 soldiers. 

Still supported by Ethiopians, government troops prepared Friday for a major
assault on Ras Kamboni, the last stronghold of the Islamic militia. U.S.
warships patrolled offshore to prevent militiamen from escaping by sea. 

The U.S. 5th Fleet said vessels were being boarded to look for militants,
including three al-Qaida suspects wanted for the 1998 bombings of two U.S.
embassies in East Africa. The Islamic council has denied U.S. allegations
that three were leaders in the Somali movement. 

Col. Barre "Hirale" Aden Shire, the Somali defense minister, said Islamic
militiamen were dug in with their backs to the sea at Ras Kamboni at the
southernmost tip of the country. 

"Today we will launch a massive assault on the Islamic courts militias. We
will use infantry troops and fighter jets," he said. "They have dug huge
trenches around Ras Kamboni but have only two options: to drown in the sea
or to fight and die." 

Somalia's last effective central government fell in 1991, when clan-based
warlords overthrew Barre and then turned on each other. The current
government was formed two years ago with the help of the United Nations, but
was weakened by internal rifts. 

One Islamic fighter, who refused to have his name published, said Friday
that he doesn't believe the government can last on its own, although he said
he hadn't left his home. 

"I'm not scared of the government," he said, saying he was biding his time
in hopes that the Islamic movement comes back. 

* __ 

Associated Press writers Mohamed Olad Hassan and Salad Duhul contributed to
this report. 




  _____  






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