WORLD / Africa

122 killed in Somalia violence
(AP)
Updated: 2006-05-11 20:52

Fighters loyal to secular warlords and Islamic extremists fired artillery and mortars at each other early Thursday in Somalia's capital as hundreds of families fled violence that has killed at least 122 people over five days.


Gunmen keep guard as thousands of people gather to listen to the speaker of the Somali parliament, Shariif Hassan Sheikh Aden in this Sunday, Feb. 6, 2005 file picture in Mogadishu, Somalia. [AP]

The fighting has escalated steadily despite efforts by businessmen, clan elders and moderate religious leaders to broker a cease-fire. It started Sunday when extremists with alleged ties to al-Qaida tried to capture a strategic road through northern Mogadishu from the warlords.

The battle between the Islamic Court Union and the Alliance for the Restoration of Peace and Counterterrorism has centered on the northern neighborhood of Sii-Sii, with neither side gaining an advantage. While the alliance has held the road through Sii-Sii, the court union has controlled the neighborhoods on either side of it.

Militias allied to the extremists and the warlords in other parts of the city have not joined in the fighting, but continue to man their defenses amid rising tensions.

Medical officials reported 26 people killed since nightfall Wednesday. Most of the victims have been civilians caught in the crossfire. Doctors say more than 200 people have been wounded.

The International Committee of the Red Cross said two hospitals have admitted 184 wounded people, including 20 women and 22 children, and expressed concerns about "the consequences in humanitarian terms of the intense armed clashes."

Twelve shells missed their target overnight, landing on civilian homes far from the fighting, witnesses said.

"In one event, seven people of the same family ¡ª including three children ¡ª died when a mortar hit their house in Huriwaa district," Dayah Idiris, the victims' neighbor, told The Associated Press.

Hundreds of families gathered at the central bus station to flee the city.

"The fighting continues killing our brothers and sisters in front of us, so we decided to leave the city rather than watching them in a pool of blood," said Khasim Siidow, a father of eight children, who was on minibus to Wanlaweyn, 55 miles south west of Mogadishu.

Islamic Court Union chairman Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed has repeatedly promised to observe a cease-fire, but so far none has taken hold.

Late Wednesday, civic leader Abdulahi Shir'wa said neutral groups were mediating talks between the leaders of the two militias. But Abdinura Siad, a commander of the secular alliance, said he thought the mediators were biased.

"The Islamists should stop fighting, then we can stop," Siad said. "We are only defending ourselves."
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