Somali residents welcome Ethiopian troops after rebel rout

By Kumerra Gemechu, Reuters | March 4, 2012



Amisom tanks
African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) tanks patrol after fighting against Islamist insurgents al Shabaab in Suqa Holaha village of Horiwaa district, northern Mogadishu March 3, 2012 (Reuters)

BAIDOA, Somalia, March 4 (Reuters) – After three years
of killings and violence under the rule of al Shabaab rebels,
residents of the Somali city of Baidoa said they were happy to
see the arrival of Ethiopian soldiers, whose presence they once
resented.

Under al Shabaab’s control, Baidoa’s leaders say the city’s
people became poorer, conditions worsened and many were forced
to flee. The return of Ethiopian troops, once seen as Christian
invaders in a Muslim country, was a welcome relief.

Ethiopian and Somali troops seized the city from al Shabaab
insurgents last month, in a major blow to the militants battling
Somalia’s weak interim government.

Somalia has been in turmoil since warlords toppled dictator
Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991. Fighting has killed more than 21,000
people since al Shabaab launched its insurgency in 2007.

“Al Shabaab colonised us for three years and 12 days. Many
of us were killed, many of us were displaced and many have
migrated. So we are the survivors,” Mohammed Ma’alim Barhi, a
clan leader, told reporters in the city 250 km northwest of
Mogadishu.

“They (Ethiopian troops) have entered here three times
before. Now we like them, we support them and we are with them.”

Al Shabaab, which announced in February that it was merging
with al Qaeda, imposed a harsh interpretation of Islamic sharia
law. In areas under its control, music, movies and soccer were
banned and people were beheaded or had limbs amputated as
punishments.

“Before, there was a strong propaganda against the
Ethiopians but these three years there are many things the
people saw. There was over-taxation, they are killing people,”
Abdifatah Mohamed Gesey, governor for Bay region, said of the
insurgents.

“After we arrived here we held discussions with the elders,
business people and the women’s associations. They have asked us
to liberate nearby towns just as we liberated Baidoa.”

Gesey, who fled after al Shabaab took over the region, said
people were now returning to the city to reopen businesses.

‘ALMOST GAME OVER’

Ethiopian and Somali troops said they were welcomed by
residents who volunteered to show them where al Shabaab fighters
were hiding, and found abandoned ordnance everywhere, from
government offices to mosques, police stations to main roads.

“The enemy forces were disoriented and disintegrated. They
were incapable,” said General Yohannes Gebre-Giorgis, Commander
of the Ethiopian Forces in Somalia.

“The people have now deserted them. So there is no way they
can survive here. It is almost game over for al Shabaab.”

Baidoa residents said their most immediate priority was
meeting basic needs like food. “We need international help. Our
people are very angry. Our people are hungry and we don’t have
medicine,” Barhi said.

Baidoa Palace, a bullet-riddled building once the main seat
of Somalia’s interim government until 2009, is now a command
centre for Ethiopian troops. Its windows have been shattered by
gunfire and graffiti scrawled on its walls. The rest of the town
is dotted with abandoned houses and destroyed shops.

Ethiopia’s military presence in Somalia between late 2006
and early 2009, when it routed another Islamist administration
from power, provoked massive resentment among Somalis and
galvanized support for the militant Islamists.

Ethiopia sent troops across the border again in November to
open up a third front against the militants, who are also
fighting 9,000 Ugandan and Burundian troops under the African
Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) and Kenyan forces.

Last week, the U.N. Security Council voted to expand AMISOM,
which supports the shaky Western-backed government, to nearly
18,000 soldiers, and will include Kenyan troops.

African political and military leaders will meet in Ethiopia
next week to iron out the details of how the expanded force will
operate, Kenyan army colonel Cyrus Oguna told reporters in
Nairobi.


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