SOMALI MILITANT URGES HOLY WAR ON ETHIOPIA
By MOHAMED OLAD HASSAN, Associated Press Writer Fri Jul 21, 3:20 PM ET
BAIDOA, Somalia - Somalia's top Islamic leader called
Friday for a holy war against Ethiopia
to drive out troops the largely Christian nation sent to protect the internationally backed Somali government.
The radical Islamic forces
control more of Somalia than the government,
and have made clear they consider themselves the legitimate authority in the country.
Sheik Hassan Dahir Aweys,
in an angry radio broadcast, said Ethiopia deployed troops to the government's
base in Baidoa, 150 miles northwest of Mogadishu, to bolster
what he described as a puppet regime.
He said President Abdullahi
Yusuf, his longtime rival, has "been a servant of Ethiopia
for a long time."
"I am calling on the Somali
people to wage a holy war against Ethiopians in Baidoa," said Aweys, who is accused by the U.S. government of ties to al-Qaida. "They came to protect a government which they
set up to advance their interests."
"We must defend our sovereignty,"
he declared on Radio Shabelle.
The Islamic group organized
anti-Ethiopia demonstrations Friday in the capital, Mogadishu,
and militiamen shot dead two people who joined a daring counter-demonstration.
Residents of Baidoa reported
seeing hundreds of Ethiopian troops, in uniform and in marked armored vehicles, entering the city on Thursday and taking up
positions around President Yusuf's compound.
Ethiopian and Somali government
officials have denied Ethiopian troops are in the country, though witnesses from five towns have reported seeing them. The
government's deputy information minister, Salad Ali Jeele, maintained Friday that people were seeing government militia wearing
uniforms given to them by Ethiopia.
Reliance on Ethiopia appears to make the government beholden to the country's
traditional enemy and hurts its legitimacy. Anti-Ethiopia sentiment still runs high in much of this almost entirely Muslim
country, which is why the government and Ethiopia,
a mostly Christian nation, may want to keep the troop deployment quiet.
The neighboring countries
are traditional enemies, although Somalia's president has asked Ethiopia for its support.
The Ethiopians kept off
the streets of Baidoa for most of Friday. Residents saw them move in trucks between their positions earlier in the day, said
Salah Adow, a resident in the town.
Pro-government militiamen
set up an extra check point on the road leading to the capital to bolster security in Baidoa. Militias were not patrolling
the streets, except for armed escorts of government officials.
Residents of Baidoa appeared
unfazed by the presence of Ethiopian troops. Tensions sparked by fears of attacks by Islamic militants earlier in the week
eased Friday in the town.
Ethiopia's move could give the internationally recognized Somali government its only chance of curbing the Islamic
militia's increasing power. But the incursion could also be just the pretext the militiamen need to build public support for
a guerrilla war.
If the competition for power
should become violent, there is little doubt that Ethiopia
has the superior fighting force. Ethiopia sent troops into Somalia in 1993 and 1996 to quash Islamic militants attempting
to establish a religious government.
Somalia has been without an effective central government since warlords toppled dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in
1991 and then turned on each other, carving much of the country into armed camps ruled by violence and clan law.
The interim government has
been weakened by internal rivalries and is distrusted by some Somalis because it includes warlords linked to past violence
and instability. The Islamic group portrays itself as a new force capable of bringing order and unity.
The United States on Thursday
urged Ethiopia to exercise restraint and said the European Union,
the United States, the African Union, the Arab League and others in an international contact group on Somalia will meet soon
to consider the volatile situation.
U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan expressed concerns about the increased tensions
near Baidoa and urged dialogue, according to a U.N. statement Thursday.
On Wednesday, the Islamic
militia reached within 20 miles of Baidoa, prompting the government to go on high alert. The militia began pulling back Thursday
as more than 400 Ethiopian troops entered Baidoa.
The United States has accused the Supreme Islamic Courts Council of links to al-Qaida that include
sheltering suspects in the deadly 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.
In a recent Internet posting, al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden urged Somalis to support the militants and warned nations not to send troops here.
The Islamic militia has
installed strict religious courts, sparking fears it will become a Taliban-style regime.