Home arrow News in English arrow Politics | Somalia arrow Islamists Behead Three Soldiers in Somalia
Halaagii Dhacay Looma Kala Harin
Added by:Ali Moallim
Rating:
Views:827
Date:30-11-2008
SOMALI STARZ TEAM IN SEATTLE XAWAALADA IFTIN
Added by:Ali Moallim
Rating:
Views:342
Date:23-11-2008
Somali Army 70´s and 80´s
Added by:Ali Moallim
Rating:
Views:756
Date:13-11-2008
BEST NIIKO-WAA IDILAA
Added by:Ali Moallim
Rating:
Views:1222
Date:13-11-2008
Ciyaarah Dhaqanka Somali, Oromo, Cafar
Added by:Ali Moallim
Rating:
Views:447
Date:13-11-2008

Laanta Afka Soomaaliga

BBC
Voice of America

Polls

What type of government should Somalia have?
 
How do you rate President Abdullahi Yusuf?
 

Syndicate

Get Our News Updates
Mar 13 2008
Islamists Behead Three Soldiers in Somalia
Written by Ali Moallim   
Thursday, 13 March 2008

MOGADISHU (insidesomalia.org) - Islamist insurgents cut off the heads of three Somali soldiers south of the capital on Thursday and the U.N. special envoy said he would try to set up peace talks between the opposition and government.

It was the first case of beheadings since the government and its Ethiopian military allies ousted the Islamists from power in late 2006, sparking a bloody insurgency characterised by roadside bombs and hit-and-run attacks.

"This morning the mujahideen attacked the so-called government troops guarding the roads for the Ethiopian forces. We killed three of them," said Muktar Ali Robow, a senior commander of the Islamists' Shabab youth wing.

"We did what we promised to them. People traveling in that road can be asked how we killed them," he told Reuters by telephone from an undisclosed location.

Witnesses in the area said they saw three headless corpses near Lego town, 130 km (81 miles) south of Mogadishu.

"We were terrified because we have never seen a human slaughtered like an animal," truck driver Hassan Mohamed Amin told Reuters.

At least 7,000 people have died, and hundreds of thousands been displaced in the 15-month insurgency, creating what aid workers call one of the world's worst yet most ignored humanitarian crises.

PEACE TALKS?

The government appealed again this week for its foes to join talks led by the United Nations.

"I have no doubt that all Somalis and their concerned friends, governments and organisations will support this move," said U.N. envoy to Somalia, Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah.

"As requested by the Somali parties, I will assume the leadership role and will contact all sides to propose the timing and modalities for future discussions," he added in a statement issued from his office in Nairobi.

Analysts believe, however, it is unlikely Islamist-led insurgents, many of whom view their attacks on the Western-backed government as a jihad or holy war could be persuaded to join.

And an Eritrean-based alliance of Somali opposition groups

Made up of former parliamentarians, Islamists and some members of the foreign Diaspora -- is insisting Ethiopian troops withdraw before talks.

Ethiopia sent thousands of soldiers into Somalia in late 2006 to help the government, virtually encircled in the town of Baidoa, topple Somalia's Islamic Courts Council which had ruled most of the south from Mogadishu since the middle of that year.

The scattered Islamist fighters regrouped and have waged an Iraq-style insurgency.

Ould-Abdallah, who works from Nairobi due to insecurity in Mogadishu, said civil society organisations and Somalis in the Diaspora were eager to join reconciliation discussions.

(Additional reporting by Andrew Cawthorne in Nairobi, Ahmed Mohamed in Baidoa; Writing by Jack Kimball, editing by Matthew Tostevin)

(For full Reuters Africa coverage and to have your say on the top issues, visit: http://africa.reuters.com/)

( This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it ; +254 20 222 4717)

Source: Reuters

Comments (0)add
Write comment
quote
bold
italicize
underline
strike
url
image
quote
quote
smile
wink
laugh
grin
angry
sad
shocked
cool
tongue
kiss
cry
smaller | bigger

busy
 
Newer news items
Older news items

<< Previous Page                    Next Page>>

< Prev   Next >