21
people killed and many more injured after fighters clash
with African Union peacekeepers in Mogadishu.
At least 21 people have been killed in the Somali capital
of Mogadishu after fighters from an armed group clashed
with African Union troops.
Scores more people were
injured in the battles, which included artillery shelling
and gunfire, on Wednesday, Ali Muse, an ambulance service
chief, said.
Witnesses said that African Union (AU) troops shelled
the area of Bakara market, the city's largest market,
following an attack on one of their convoys.
"The medical teams got an emergency alert and they
rushed to Bakara market where they have collected around
16 dead bodies of civilians who were killed in the
shelling," Muse said.
Convoy attack
At least five other civilians were killed in crossfire
after a roadside bomb and an ambush hit an AU peacekeepers
convoy, witnesses said.
AU officials said that the attack on their convoy had
occurred but did not comment on any civilian casualties.
Al-Shabab, a key group fighting the government, said a
day earlier that they would continue attacks against
anyone who opposed their rule in the country, which
extends to much of Mogadishu and large parts of the south
and centre of the country.
Ali Muhamud Hussein, al-Shabab's self proclaimed mayor
of Mogadishu, said: "We are prepared to fight every single
infidel wherever he or she is, including as far as Moscow.
"We need to terrorise all unbelievers anywhere."
Al-Sahbab has fought Somalia's UN-backed transitional
government for more than three years.
The current government of Sheikh Sharif Ahmed, the
president, controls only parts of the capital.
There has been no effective central government since
1991 in Somalia which has undergone periods of war for
much of that time.
Source:
Agencies
www.ceegaag.com