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Carnage in Somali market shelling

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"There is blood everywhere, and human flesh on the walls," said market trader Abshir Mohamed Ali.

 

Eleven people were killed when a shell landed in an alleyway, while six family members died overnight, they say.

 

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Ethiopia Starving Somalis in ******

 

Everywhere visited, villagers huddled together in fear from Ethiopian terror than the hunger which visited them. Family after family told stories of pogroms, appalling cruelty and threats by Ethiopian paramilitaries closely linked to Ethiopian military to avenge for every Ethiopian soldier killed in Somalia or by rebel groups. These paramilitaries often enjoy immunity to rape, torture and kill Somali civilians.

The latest grief for Somalis was the confirmation of Ethiopian administration to designate Fridays as a working day.
Friday is similar to Sabbath and Sunday for Muslims as they consider it a holy day. This loss of religious right has become the latest denial of rights to Muslim Somalis. Somali experts cite an increasing fear of the regime afraid of Muslim gatherings and sermons as the rising tension could spark demonstration in cities such as Jigjiga.

 

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MOGADISHU, Sept 22 (Reuters) - Mortar bombs hit a Mogadishu market on Monday in a second day of fighting that has killed at least 42 people, witnesses said.

 

Islamist insurgents are battling the Somali government and their Ethiopian military backers in a nearly two-year conflict that some are calling Africa's Iraq.

 

Fighting worsened at the weekend, even as U.N. officials sought to broker a ceasefire between government and opposition representatives in neighbouring Djibouti.

 

Somali police and the hardline al Shabaab Islamists blamed each other for the attacks.

 

"Al Shabaab militant group attacked government bases and foreign troop bases. They also threw mortars at residential areas...So al Shabaab is responsible for all that has happened today and last night," said police spokesman Abdulahi Hassan Barise.

 

In the biggest incident, shells hit packed Bakara market, horrifying shoppers and killing about 30 people, residents said.

 

Al Shabaab said government and Ethiopian troops had targeted the residential area considered a stronghold of the Islamist insurgents, after rebel attacks on the presidential palace.

 

"When troops die in attacks they (government troops) target civilians like ... at Bakara Market today," Muktar Roboow, an al Shabaab official told Reuters.

 

Ali Dhere, chairman of Bakara business committee, said government-fired shells hit the market, which lies in a densely-populated area.

 

"We don't know why they are targeting Bakara because this is a market, a public place," he told Reuters.

 

Bakara traders described a terrible scene.

 

"We saw four people die on the spot. Their flesh and bones were scattered into pieces," said clothes seller Nur Omar.

 

Abdi Nur Hassan, who runs an electronics stall, said two missiles landed nearby. "I have seen six people die, some of them missing legs and hands. We collected their bodies, but it is difficult to separate them," he said.

 

As well as the presidential palace, the Somali rebels also attacked two bases of African Union (AU) peacekeepers, and shelled the city's main airport on Monday where a commercial flight defied a ban by the al Shabaab group to land.

 

Residents also said at least a dozen people had died in fighting on Sunday. "A missile hit a neighbour's house and killed nine people in the same family," one resident, Farhiya Abdullahi, told Reuters of the worst incident.

 

After being chased away from their power base, Mogadishu, Islamists launched an insurgency in early 2007 that has killed nearly 10,000 civilians and an unknown number of combatants.

 

They have become increasingly bold in the last two months, stepping up attacks in the Somali capital and capturing the strategic southern port of Kismayu.

 

Al Shabaab is on Washington's terrorism list, and Western security services say the Islamists have close links to al Qaeda. Rebel leaders, however, depict themselves as nationalists fighting an unwanted occupation by Ethiopia.

 

During lulls in the fighting, Mogadishu residents rushed their wounded to the city's few clinics. Staff at Madina hospital said they had admitted 65 wounded people since Sunday.

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