EDITOR’S NOTE: The people of Ethiopia have no role in this war crime against Somalis. It is Meles Zenawi, his generals, and their puppet master Jendayi Frazier at the U.S. State Department who are feasting in Somali blood. Unless Reuters and other news agencies stop referring to Zenawi’s mercenary soldiers as “Ethiopian troops,” may be we Ethiopians around the world need sue them for defamation.
MOGADISHU (Reuters) – Almost 50 people were killed in Somalia after separate roadside bombs targeting allied Ethiopian Woyanne and government troops went off and led to retaliatory attacks, residents said on Friday.
In one clash on Friday afternoon, Ethiopian Woyanne troops opened fire on civilians on a road out of Mogadishu when an explosion occurred in the middle of their convoy.
“I heard a big explosion and a vehicle in an Ethiopian Woyanne convoy exploded,” said Abdirahman Adan, who lives alongside the road out of the capital to the southern town of Afgooye.
“Ethiopian Woyanne soldiers in the convoy started to shoot indiscriminately. I ran away, but when I came back half an hour later, I saw 38 people had died and 16 injured.”
Adan said some of the dead had been passengers on buses that travel the route.
Another local resident, Hawa Abdi, said a relative was wounded during the incident. She saw five people that had died from the attack and 20 others who were hurt.
“We wanted to reach Mogadishu’s big hospital but we are unable to pass the streets because the road is closed,” she said.
In a separate attack, about five people were killed when a roadside bomb exploded as government troops checked out a street ahead of a presidential motorcade.
President Abdullahi Yusuf, his estranged Prime Minister Nur Hassan Hussein and parliamentary speaker were heading for Addis Ababa in Ethiopia for talks over a growing rift between the two leaders. They later managed to leave the country, officials said.
Yusuf’s fragile interim government is struggling to assert its authority in the face of a 20-month Iraqi-style insurgency. Somalia has witnessed unending violence since former strongman Mohamed Siad Barre was ousted in 1991.
The attacks came a day before a separate U.N.-brokered peace talks begun in neighbouring Djibouti.
The violence in Somalia has already claimed the lives of more than 8,000 civilians and driven 1 million from their homes since January 2007.
(Writing by Helen nyambura-Mwaura, Editing by Matthew Jones)