UPDATED ON:
Sunday, October 26, 2008
21:33 Mecca time, 18:33 GMT
News Africa
Somalis agree Ethiopian deadline
Ethiopian troops entered Somalia in support of government forces in late 2006 [File: EPA]

Ethiopian forces would withdraw from Somalia early next year under a deal signed by the Somali government and several opposition groups in Djibouti, a UN spokeswoman said.

The accord, signed at UN-sponsored talks on Sunday, ressurrected a ceasefire deal agreed in July, but came as at least 13 people were killed in the Horn of Africa nation's ongoing violence.

The government and the Alliance for the Re-liberation of Somalia (ARS) agreed that Ethiopian troops would initially pull out of areas in the capital Mogadishu and the central town of Beledweyne on November 21.

These areas would be left under the control of African Union troops (Amisom), Susannah Price, spokeswoman for the UN envoy to Somalia, said.

"The second phase of Ethiopian troop withdrawal should be completed within 120 days," the agreement said, although Price was unable to say when exactly the countdown would begin.

Ethiopian forces were deployed to Somalia to help government troops force out the Islamic courts union, which controlled Mogadishu and much of southern and central Somalia.

However, it was unclear how succesful the deal, which comes before efforts to restart peace talks in the Kenyan capital Nairobi, would be in tackling the violence as al-Shabaab, which has carried out a series of attacks, and several other armed groups were not represented in Djibouti. 

Military ambushed

In the latest violence, six people died when  Ethiopian and Somali forces clashed with anti-government fighters after their military convoy was ambushed near the town of Baidoa. 

A witness said that the fighters used "mortars and machine-gun fire" to attack nine government vehicles. A second witness said nine Somali soldiers were taken to hospital.

In Wanlaweyn, about 90km south of Mogadishu, the bodies were of four civilians were found after another clash between Ethiopian forces and fighters.

Two police officers and a civilian alo died when a roadside bomb exploded near a police checkpoint in the north of the capital, according to police.

More than 10,000 people have been killed and one million other displaced by the fighting since early last year.

 Source: Agencies
 
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Feedback Number of comments : 4
 
mumin
Kenya
27/10/2008
Somalis agree Ethiopian deadline
good deal we all knew that Ethiopia would have liked to stay all over Somalia but they cannot maintain their mercenary troops in many places, they have difficulty in protecting their occupation mercenary troops in Mogadishu alone let alone other places. Time will come, and it will not be far away

axmed
United States
28/10/2008
It's never too late to safe face, get out before hell breaks loose.

Bigmel1981
Malaysia
27/10/2008
Somalis agree Ethiopian deadline
Just to many dead.

Mohamed
Afghanistan
29/10/2008
skeptical
It is good news ethiopian troops are leaving the somali land.But I am so skeptical the somalis party will bring peace to that land.all parties seems standing after themselves not for the peolpe of somali.This is not a surprise because the same menatlity works all over africa.Leaders care for themselves not for the poor people who are dying and suffering.God save Somali people as well african people!!

 
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