UPDATED ON:
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
20:22 Mecca time, 17:22 GMT
 
News Africa
Deaths in Mogadishu market attack
At least 17 people were wounded in the attack on Mogadishu's main market [AFP]

Five people are reported to have been killed and at least 17 people wounded after Ethiopian forces fired mortar shells close to Mogadishu's main market, witnesses said.

Mohamud Hussein, a mini-bus driver who witnessed Tuesday's attack, said: "Three mortar shells landed in Bakara market and hit traders and customers."

Faisal Ali, a resident of the Bakara quarter where the market is sitauated, said: "I saw two dead bodies and three women injured by mortar shells that crashed onto their house."

The violence came as the UN Security Council voted unanimously to renew  the mandate of African Union (AU) peacekeepers operating in Somalia for another six months.

UN Resolution 1831 also urged all members states to "provide financial resources, personnel, equipment and services for the full deployment" of the AU force, known as Amisom.

'Tragic killings'

The attack came four days after more than 30 people - mainly civilians - were killed in fighting when Ethiopian forces opened fire on two buses near Mogadishu, according to eyewitnesses.

But the Ethiopian foreign ministry denied its troops killed civilians and put the death toll at only 11.

"The tragic killings of innocent civilians on Friday were not carried out by Ethiopian troops, but rather by al-Shebab insurgents who planted a bomb on the minibus," it said in a statement on national television.

Ethiopian forces entered Somalia in late 2006 at the request of the largely powerless transitional government, helping to remove the Islamic Courts Union, which controlled large parts of the Horn of Africa country at the time.

UN officials also announced on Tuesday Somalia's government had formally signed a peace deal - initialled in June - with some members of the opposition.

But the pact has been rejected by many Islamic officials and military commanders, who have insisted that Ethiopian troops propping up the Somali government unilaterally pull out of Somalia before peace talks can start.

The agreement has done little to quell violence in Somalia.

 Source: Agencies
Feedback Number of comments : 2
 
RA Crouch
United States
20/08/2008
15 Year Anniversary
October will make 15 years since American forces were there and smallies are still killing each other when no one else is around to kill.

Ali Somali
Somalia
20/08/2008
Headlines Related to Ethiopian Attricities in Somalia
Dear Editor, You seem to avoid the use of the name of the country that is committing the war crimes in Somalia. The headline "Deaths in Mogadishu Market Attack" omitted naming the na the attackers. If you are neutral about this conflict, the headline should read like "Ethiopian Troops kill Civillians in Mogadishu"

 
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