Islamic Militants Declare Victory in Mogadishu 
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/05/world/africa/05cnd-somalia.html
 
<http://view.atdmt.com/ORG/view/nwyrkfxs0040000007org/direct;at.orgfxs000008
90/01/> 
By MARC
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/l/marc_lacey/ind
ex.html?inline=nyt-per> LACEY
Published: June 5, 2006

NAIROBI, Kenya, June 5 - Islamic militias declared victory today over
Somalia's traditional warlords in the battle for control of Mogadishu,
quelling months of fierce fighting in the lawless capital but raising new
questions about whether this regime, which American officials have accused
of sheltering terrorists, will steer the country down an extremist path.

Skip
<http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/05/world/africa/05cnd-somalia.html#secondPar
agraph> to next paragraph 
  <http://graphics10.nytimes.com/images/2006/06/05/world/somalia.190.2.jpg> 
Albadri Abukar/European Pressphoto Agency

Militiamen from the Islamic Courts Union guarded the recently captured base
of Home Security Minister Mohamed Qanyare Afrah in Mogadishu. 

  <http://graphics10.nytimes.com/images/2006/06/05/world/somalia.1900.1.jpg>

Mohamed Sheikh Nor/Associated Press

Islamic militia members resting next to a military vehicle that they have
seized during their raid on Mogadishu, Somalia. 

"We want to restore peace and stability to Mogadishu," Sheik Sharif Ahmed,
chairman of the Islamic Courts Union, said in a radio broadcast, according
to The Associated Press. "We are ready to meet and talk to anybody and any
group for the interest of the people."

Some of the warlords who have ruled over Mogadishu for the last 15 years
were on the run today. One was holed up in a hospital north of the city.
Others were on the outskirts of the capital, their forces having been pushed
from the strategic center.

They had been defeated by militia fighters allied with the Islamic courts
that have grown in influence throughout Somalia in recent years, filling a
void left by the lack of a central government. The Islamists are a loose
coalition of leaders who have put forward Islam, the universal religion in
Somalia, as the way out of anarchy.

Backing the Islamists have been business leaders eager to end the arbitrary
rule of the warlords, as well as freelance gunmen willing to work for anyone
who pays them a salary and supplies them with a daily fix of khat, a leaf
that is widely chewed among Somalis as a natural stimulant. 

Now that the Islamists have taken over Mogadishu, the question remains how
they will choose to govern and whether infighting among the Islamists
themselves might send the city back into the chaos it has long known.

More than 300 people have been killed and 1,700 wounded in the recent
fighting, according to figures provided by the International Committee of
the Red Cross.

"We have to appeal to the moderates in this Islamist movement," said Mario
Raffaelli, the Italian special envoy for Somalia. "We have to make clear
that we are supporting the government."

The upheaval in Mogadishu comes as a transitional government that was
created after two years of peace talks struggles to establish a toehold in
the country. Based in Baidoa, outside Mogadishu, because it lacked the
strength to take on the many gunmen based in the capital, the government
finds itself negotiating with a largely unknown force.

In a cabinet meeting late Sunday night, as the victory by the Islamic courts
became clear, the government decided to open talks with the new
administration. They also fired the four Mogadishu warlords who had been
battling the Islamists, all four of whom held cabinet positions in the new
government but flouted calls by their colleagues for them to stop fighting.

The four men are Mohamed Qanre Afrah, who was minister of national security;
Muse Sudi Yalahow, who was minister of commerce; Botan Isse Alin, minister
of demobilization; and Omar Mohamed Mohamud, minister of religious affairs.

Washington has been widely accused of secretly financing the warlords, who
fashioned themselves into a counterterrorism alliance to root out Al
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/a/al_qaed
a/index.html?inline=nyt-org> Qaeda elements in Mogadishu. Although American
officials have yet to confirm giving payments to the warlords, the
widespread belief that money was changing hands only seemed to strengthen
the hands of the Islamists among many Somalis.

Somalia has been without a central government since the country slipped into
civil war in 1992. An American-led humanitarian effort in 1993, which was
transformed into a hunt for some of Mogadishu's warlords, ended badly after
18 American soldiers were killed in a battle made famous by the book and
film "Black Hawn Down."

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