UPDATED ON:
Thursday, January 25, 2007
02:32 Mecca time, 23:32 GMT
 
News Africa
Mogadishu airport shelled
Witnesses said Somali police assaulted civilians at the airport after the attack [EPA file pic]

At least two people have been killed after a barrage of mortar shells was fired into Mogadishu's main airport shortly after a United Nations (UN) plane landed there.
 
The attack in the Somali capital came 15 minutes after a nine-member UN delegation arrived at the airport from Kenya on Wednesday, but there was no indication it was the target.
Ahmed Hersi, who was by the terminal at the time of the attack, said several mortar shells landed at the Mogadishu international airport.
 
He said dozens of people who were in the airport's open grounds fled inside amid fears of more attacks.

Troop base

The airport serves as a base for Ethiopian troops who helped the interim Somali government overthrow Islamic courts fighters late last month.

The UN delegation, from the UN refugee agency and the office for the co-ordination of humanitarian affairs, was taken to the UN compound in Mogadishu where they were meeting with Somali officials as planned.

Witnesses said Somali police forces and Ethiopian troops sealed off the airport and surrounding neighbourhoods after the attack and then assaulted civilians.

Assault

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A cafe owner at the airport, who asked to remain anonymous, said he had been shot by police.

He said: "Ethiopian troops and Somali police came into my restaurant and beat us very badly. I sustained a small gunshot wound, but I am getting treatment in the hospital."

A police official, who also requested anonymity, said "the beating was a case of mistaken identity".

Muhamoud Yassin, a taxi driver, said the situation remained tense: "People are not allowed to and from the facility. There is a heavy security presence."

The attack came a day after a first batch of Ethiopian troops began pulling out of Mogadishu, even though a proposed 7,600-strong African Union peacekeeping force has yet to be deployed.

US attack

In a separate development, The Washington Post, citing unnamed US officials, said that a US AC-130 gunship had fired at suspected al-Qaeda operatives in southern Somalia on Monday.

If confirmed, it would be the second US attack this month in southern Somalia using an AC-130, a fixed-wing aircraft with rapid-firing guns.

On January 8 the US attacked a site where senior al-Qaeda operatives were believed to be hiding.

Neither Hussein Mohamed Aidid, the Somali deputy prime minister, or Abdirahman Dinari, a government spokesman, could confirm the attack.

Aidid said: "This is just speculation and we have not received any  information."

 Source: Agencies
 
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