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BREAKING NEWS ICU DRAG AND BURN TFG & ETHIO SOLDIERS

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Hiiraan boy
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BREAKING NEWS ICU DRAG AND BURN TFG & ETHIO SOLDIERS

Postby Hiiraan boy » Wed Mar 21, 2007 4:04 am

MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP)--Somali and Ethiopian troops entered an insurgent stronghold in central Mogadishu Wednesday, triggering a battle in which at least seven people were killed and 10 were injured, witnesses and medical officials said.

Hundreds of masked insurgents confronted the government forces, which were supported by tanks and armored vehicles, as they entered the area, said Ali Haji Jama, a resident of the northeastern neighborhood at the center of the fighting.

An Associated Press photographer saw insurgents drag the bodies of one Ethiopian soldier and one Somali government soldier through the streets of northeastern Mogadishu and then set them on fire.

It was a scene reminiscent of when Somali militiamen shot down a U.S. Blackhawk helicopter during a failed attempt to deal with insurgents in 1993. The images of U.S. troops being dragged through the streets led to the eventual withdrawal of U.N. forces and years of disorder in Somalia.

"Ethiopian tanks rolled out of the former defense ministry and moved into nearby Shirkole area, which is seen as the stronghold of the insurgent groups and they met with stiff resistance," said Jama, a resident of the northeastern neighborhood at the center of the fighting. Other witnesses said minibuses filled with insurgents were racing through the city to reach Shirkole and defend against the Ethiopian advance.

Muqtar Abdulahi Dahir, a Mogadishu businessman, said he saw the same minibuses carrying away the wounded.

"I also saw insurgents evacuating some of their men with minibuses, but I am not sure whether they were dead or not," he said.

Medical officials at Mogadishu's three hospitals said they had recorded at least seven dead and 10 wounded by midmorning. Government officials did not answer their telephones early Wednesday.

Ethiopia sent soldiers into Somalia in December to defeat an Islamic movement that threatened to destroy Somalia's internationally-recognized government. While the Islamist forces no longer hold territory, they have started an insurgency to overthrow the government and drive out the Ethiopian troops.

Insurgents have fired mortars and rocket-propelled grenades at the Somali forces and their Ethiopian allies almost daily, but until now had only responded with artillery fired from within their compounds.

Somali leaders have said in recent weeks that they were preparing a major offensive to stop the growing insurgency.

Somalia has been without an effective central government since 1991. The present government has so far failed to assert itself and the African Union has deployed a small peacekeeping force to defend it. Daily violence has continued in the capital, Mogadishu.

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