Ethiopian News and Opinion Journal


  • HOME
  • SUBSCRIBE
  • CONTACT
  • FORUM
  • VIDEO
  • DIRECTORY
  • ADVERTISE
  • ALBUM
  • DICTIONARY
  • CLASSIFIEDS
  • EXERCISE
  • Login

Somali army general, others assassinated in Somali capital, says U.N. agency

October 12th, 2007 |  |  2 Comments

MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) – An army general, two magistrates and others have been assassinated in the past week in the Somali capital, the U.N.’s humanitarian coordination agency said Friday, highlighting Mogadishu’s pervasive violence.

The assassinations show the difficulty the fragile government and its Ethiopian Woyanne allies face in trying to bring order in Mogadishu, which has been wracked by violence this year. Thousands of civilians have died in the fighting.
The U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs gathered the information on assassinations from its staff in Somalia as well as local media reports.

Also, unknown assailants attacked African Union peacekeepers in their base on Monday, but no one was injured, the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said in a statement. The attack had not been previously reported.

Four people were wounded on Thursday when unknown assailants fired a rocket at their Toyota pickup in the southern Somalia town of Buale, 410 kilometers (255 miles) southwest of Mogadishu, said Ali Dek, a resident.
Somalia’s U.N.-backed government has been struggling to assert authority since it chased an Islamic group out of the capital and its southern Somalia strongholds in December with the help of Ethiopian allies. The Islamic fighters vowed to fight an Iraq-style insurgency against the government and the Ethiopians Woyannes.

Somalia has not had a functioning government since 1991, when a group of warlords overthrew dictator Mohamed Siad Barre and then turned on each other. The Horn of Africa nation is deeply impoverished and split by clan rivalries.

Email This Post | Add a comment FORUM  |  2 Comments



Related Posts

  1. Fourt dead after gunbattles and blasts in Somali capital
  2. Senior Somali police commander assassinated in Mogadishu
  3. Violence in Somalia forcing residents out of the capital again
  4. Somali insurgents intensify attack on the capital
  5. Heavy fighting in Somali capital – BBC

2 Comments to “Somali army general, others assassinated in Somali capital, says U.N. agency”

  1. Hiwot says:

    Gud fela le Woyane.In Somaila Woyane is in deep trouble and now Eritreans are taking a calculted risk to attack TPLF army any time.

    [Reply]

    October 12th, 2007 at 10:01 PM

  2. Memeru says:

    I heard that a big numbor of the Somali cabinet members have resigned as well.

    [Reply]

    October 13th, 2007 at 12:40 AM

Leave a Comment

To write your comment in Amharic click here. አስተያየትዎን በአማርኛ ለመጻፍ እዚህ ይጫኑ:: ጽፈው ከጨረሱ በኋላ የጻፉትን ኮፒ አድርገው ወደዚህ ተመልሰው አስተያየት መስጫ ቦክስ ውስጥ ፔስት ያድርጉ::



Click to cancel reply








Recent Posts
  • Ethiopian Youth Public Meeting in Dallas – Saturday, Feb. 11
  • DC area Ethiopian churches under attack
  • Saudi pressured to release detained Ethiopians
  • International Ethiopian Women Conference March 9-11
  • ALEJE and OLF Public Meeting in Washington DC – Feb. 19
  • Where the truth lies in Ethiopia
  • Transformative Reconciliation for Unity in a Nutshell
  • When we were the peacemakers
  • Cooperative Behavior for Transformatve Reconciliation & Unity
  • A resurgent Ethiopian opposition in a new form
  • African Beggars Union Hall?
  • Kilil system is an instrument of Ethiopian disenfrachisement – Part 4
  • Several Meles Zenawi bodyguards arrested
  • UN experts dismayed by growing repression in Ethiopia
  • Swedish journalists appeal to Ethiopia’s dictator
  • Another sign of worsening repression in Ethiopia – IFEX
  • Using Anti-Terror Laws to Terrorize Dissent
  • We’ve met the enemy and he is us
  • Essentials to Resolve Differences for Reconciliation
  • Ethiopian delegation delivers letter to Saudi Arabia embassy in DC


©2012 Ethiopian Review
Publisher & Editor-in-Chief: Elias Kifle
Powered by WordPress