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Plane crashes on third day of Mogadishu clashes


Friday, March 23, 2007

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MOGADISHU (Reuters) - A large plane burst into flames in mid-air and crashed in northern Mogadishu, a Somali witness said on Friday, during a third day of clashes in the capital between insurgents and Ethiopian troops.

A Somali government source said the plane was a Russian-made Ilyushin carrying engineers who had been working on another damaged aircraft at Mogadishu airport.

Local radio reported the crashed plane had been hit by a missile. Witnesses described seeing it come down but could not confirm it had been attacked.

"I saw the plane on fire...One of the wings exploded in the air...When it hit the ground, another explosion occurred," Hassan Mahamud Jama, a resident of the area, told Reuters.

The Ethiopians are helping the government fight an insurgency many fear could plunge Somalia back into civil war.

Witnesses heard shelling and cannon fire near a former defense headquarters, the scene of repeated fighting since Wednesday. There were no immediate reports of casualties.

At least 16 people have been killed and hundreds more wounded this week in the bloodiest clashes since the government and Ethiopian troops seized the coastal city from rival Islamists three months ago.

Thousands of residents have fled almost daily guerrilla attacks in Mogadishu that were blamed on Islamist remnants and clansmen angry at a government trying to restore central rule to Somalia after 16 years of lawlessness.

Residents say the latest violence coincides with a government-led disarmament drive which has provoked particular resistance from Mogadishu's dominant Hawiye clan.

President Abdullahi Yusuf's government says it wants to secure the gun-infested city before a reconciliation conference scheduled for April 16.

Many Hawiye regard the operation as an attempt by Yusuf, from the rival Darod clan, to marginalize them.

WORSE TO COME?

Hawiye elder Ahmed Diriye said senior members of his clan met Ethiopian military and security officials on Thursday to discuss their grievances.

"One question we asked was why only one...clan is being disarmed and targeted with mortar shells on a daily basis," Diriye said. "If no one listens to us, we will fight to the last man," he told Reuters.

Diriye said he hoped there would be another meeting with the Ethiopians in coming days. A tentative agreement on a ceasefire made on Thursday was broken by Friday's clashes.

Residents and officials fear the death toll will rise from this week's fighting.

"The dead are not making it to hospitals and it is too dangerous for our staff to be out on the streets, so there is no way to know yet," said Pascal Hundt of the International Committee of the Red Cross.

"By working day and night, the doctors and nurses there have been able to keep treating the wounded. But we are very concerned about the situation," he said from Nairobi.

The Red Cross estimated 300 were injured this week.

(Additional reporting by Daniel Wallis)

Source: Reuters, Mar 23, 2007