Somalia's ahlu Sunna clash with Shabaab, 10 killed

2 January, 2010 | By Abdi Sheikh
-----------------------------------------------

MOGADISHU (Reuters) - Ten people were killed on Saturday in
fighting between the pro-government Ahlu Sunna Waljamaca
group and hardline Islamist rebels in central Somalia, witnesses
and both sides said.

The fighting was the first since December 2008 when Ahlu Sunna,
made up of Sufis, took control of Dusamareb town from al Shabaab
militia after battles in which dozens of people were killed.

    Residents said heavily armed
    al Shabaab fighters attacked
    Dusamareb, 560 km (350
    miles) north of Mogadishu, in
    the early hours of the
    morning, pounding the
    eastern side of the town with
    mortars and prompting the
    ahlu Sunna to return machine
    gun fire.

"Most of the residents fled into the jungle. This fighting will obviously
spread to other central towns," elder Osman Aden told Reuters. "I have
seen 10 dead people lying in the villages as I fled."

Somalia has had no effective central government for 19 years and the
West's efforts to install one have been undermined by the insurgency led
by al Shabaab, which Washington views as al Qaeda's proxy in the
region.

Western security agencies say Somalia's appeal as a safe haven for
militants, including foreign jihadists who are using it to plot attacks in
the region and beyond, has grown over the years.

A senior al Shabaab official said on Friday the group was ready to send
reinforcements to Yemen, should the United States carry out strikes
against targets there.

Residents said the rebel group al Shabaab has been forcibly recruiting
youths in readiness for an attack against government and moderate
Islamists in central Somalia.

An Ahlu Sunna spokesman said they had repulsed al Shabaab and killed
several of their fighters who attacked Dusamareb.

"Al Shabaab attacked us this morning but we killed many of them and
took their weapons. " sheikh Abdullahi sheikh Abu Yusuf told Reuters.

"We drove them out of the town and we shall redouble our war on al
Shabaab. We shall soon reach new towns from where these pseudo
Muslims attacked us."

His al Shabaab counterpart denied the claim.

"We have captured Dusamareb and killed many Sufis. We also took four
battle wagons from them," Sheikh Ali Mohamud Rage, al Shabaab's
spokesman, told Reuters by phone from Mogadishu.

The Islamists launched their insurgency at the start of 2007 to drive out
Ethiopian troops propping up the Western-backed government in the
Horn of Africa nation.

Ethiopians left at the start of 2009 but the conflict lived on between the
Islamists and President Sharif Sheikh Ahmed's troops who control little
more than a few streets of the battle-scarred capital.

Elman, a local human rights group, has said violence in Somalia has
killed 21,862 people and displaced many more since the start of the
insurgency.

(Additional reporting by Ibrahim Mohamed; Writing by Duncan Miriri;
Editing by Angus MacSwan)

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