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Residents flee Somalia’s capital as militias begin massing

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MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) – Rival militias massed on the northern edge of Somalia’s lawless capital Saturday, prompting hundreds to flee their homes amid fears that another surge of violence was imminent in this Horn of Africa country, witnesses said.

Islamic militias and a rival alliance of secular warlords signed a ceasefire last week after more than 140 people were killed in just eight days, but tensions remained high. Most of the casualties have been noncombatants caught in crossfire or killed by stray missiles.

Shiekh Nuur Salah, a local elder, said both sides sent reinforcements to the area.

“Militia movements from both sides were visible, that is why people are in fear,” said Osman Geela, a nurse at a nearby hospital.

Somalia has been roiled in recent weeks by some of the worst fighting in more than a decade. The Islamic fundamentalists have portrayed themselves as capable of bringing order to the country, which has been without a real government since largely clan-based warlords overthrew longtime dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991.

The secular alliance, which includes some members of a UN-backed interim government but acts independently of it, accuses the Islamic militiamen of having ties to al-Qaida. The Islamic group accuses the secularists of being puppets of the United States.


Source: AP, May 20, 2006

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