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Somalia's troops enter Mogadishu

Islamists flee, call it tactical


  • Fears of chaos in Somalia amid gunfire
  • All probelems will be solved, says President

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    MOGADISHU (Somalia): Somali government troops rolled into Mogadishu unopposed on Thursday, said the Prime Minister, hours after an Islamist movement that tried to establish a government based on the Koran abandoned the capital and promised to make a stand in southern Somalia.

    ``We are in Mogadishu,'' said Prime Minister Mohamed Ali Gedi after meeting clan leaders to discuss the hand over of the city.

    ``We are coordinating our forces to take control of Mogadishu.''

    Mr. Gedi was welcomed to the town of Afgoye by dozens of traditional leaders from Mogadishu and hundreds of government and Ethiopian troops who have been fighting more than a week against the Islamist militia that had at one point taken over most of southern Somalia.

    Civilians killed

    The Islamist movement's retreat on Thursday, which its leaders called tactical, was followed by looting by clan militiamen, a chilling reminder of the chaos that had once ruled Mogadishu.

    One resident said three men and a woman had been killed in the looting. Gunfire could he heard in the city.

    Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi vowed to inflict total defeat on the Islamist movement, saying he hoped the fighting would be over ``in days, if not in a few weeks.

    ``Forces of the transitional federal government and Ethiopia are on the outskirts of Mogadishu now,'' he told reporters in Ethiopia's capital, Addis Ababa. ``We are discussing what we need to do to make sure Mogadishu does not descend into chaos. We will not let Mogadishu burn.''

    Clan leaders, though, have the greatest influence over whether order or lawlessness follows the retreat of the Islamist movement known as the Council of Islamic Courts.

    President Abdullahi Yusuf said in a statement on Thursday afternoon that his troops were not a threat to the people of Mogadishu.

    ``The Government is committed to solving every problem that may face Somalia through dialogue and peaceful ways,'' the statement said. Mohamed Jama Furuh, a former warlord and current MP, claimed control of the capital's seaport on behalf of the Government at midday on Thursday.

    His militia had controlled the port before Islamist forces took over. — AP

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