/ 4 July 2008

Somali forces claim 71 insurgents killed

Allied Ethiopian-Somali troops in Somalia have killed 71 Islamist insurgents in an operation launched in central regions late last week, Ethiopia’s state television reported.

Hard-line Islamists have been waging an 18-month insurgency that has drawn comparisons with Iraq to undermine the interim government and its Ethiopian backers since the rebels were ousted from Mogadishu and most of southern Somalia in 2007.

”The joint Ethiopian army and forces of the Somali Transitional Federal government destroyed a group of 71 terrorists in a military operation launched in Meteban and Gura’el areas on June 29,” the television report quoted a military spokesperson as saying late on Thursday.

”A Canadian colonel, who was being sought for international terrorism, and 13 top leaders of the Islamic Courts Union and al-Shaabab were among those killed in the operation,” the report said.

Insurgent troops were preparing to launch an offensive around the Meteban and Gura’el areas in central Somalia, he said.

But a spokesperson of the Islamist movement said only seven fighters were killed and nine others wounded in the clashes.

”The news from the Ethiopian State Agency is totally fabricated,” rebel spokesperson Sheikh Abdirahim Issa Adow said. ”We killed many Ethiopians and burnt their military vehicles but they do not admit to that.”

He denied the insurgents had a Canadian colonel in their ranks.

”Ethiopians claimed to have killed Colonel Abdi Ahmed, who we do not know,” Adow said, adding that no government soldier was involved in the fighting.

The Horn of Africa country has been in near-perpetual conflict since the 1991 toppling of a dictator.

A Mogadishu-based human rights group said on Wednesday that at least 53 people were killed when the insurgents clashed with Ethiopian troops and Ugandan peacekeepers in separate battles. — Reuters