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A chartered plane sits on the ground at Mogadishu airport, Sunday, July 30, 2006. The first commercial flight in more than a decade departed Mogadishu International Airport on Sunday, illustrating the complete control held by Islamic militants who have seized the capital and much of southern Somalia. A plane operated by a local company, Jubba Airlines, left Sunday and was headed to the United Arab |
Local airlines had been operating from private airstrips outside the capital.
Now, Islamic militiamen are guarding the airport for commercial passengers, said Sheik Muqtar Robow, deputy defense chief for the Islamic group.
“This is a historic flight for me,” passenger Hawa Abdi Hussein said before boarding the Somalia-based Jubba Airways plane to the United Arab Emirates. “I think we at last gained peace and security.”
The prime minister of
The Islamic militia imposed strict religious courts after taking hold of the capital and surrounding areas last month, raising fears of a Taliban-style hard-line regime. The
had been without an effective central government since warlords deposed dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991, plunging the country into chaos.
News of Sunday’s flight gratified Hussein Osman Kariye, a secondary school teacher in
“I remember in the older days, happier times, when I would welcome my relatives from abroad. The airport was very beautiful then, well-lit, decorated and green,” Kariye said.
Prime Minister Mohammed Ali Gedi’s government has been unraveling since the militants’ victory. On Thursday, 18 lawmakers resigned in disgust, saying his weak administration has failed to bring peace.
But he kept his job Sunday even though only 88 lawmakers voted to keep him and 126 voted for his ouster. The motion needed 139 votes to pass.
“All mistakes and doubts about my administration will be soon resolved,” Gedi said after the vote in Baidoa, 150 miles northwest of
Gedi said that those who voted against him were “serving the enemy of
Gedi has accused
The
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Jendayi Frazier said over the weekend that both sides in the conflict have “invited in foreign forces,” but she gave no specifics.
A Somali militia commander said that Sunday that 25 sailors who were taken hostage in April off the Horn of Africa country’s lawless coast had been released for more than $800,000 in ransom and were headed to the
A South Korean official has said that the hostages were from
The militants claimed they seized the boat to defend their waters from illegal fishing.
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Associated Press reporter Mohamed Olad Hassan contributed to this report from Baidoa.
Source: AP, July 30, 2006