|
A U.S. missile strike Monday against
suspected terrorists in a remote village of southern Somalia
killed at least six people and wounded 10, witnesses and local
leaders said.
A Tomahawk cruise missile was launched from a U.S. submarine off
the coast of the African nation, U.S. officials said, but they
declined to identify the target or provide other details.
It was the fourth U.S. military strike in Somalia since
Ethiopian troops entered the country in the Horn of Africa in
December 2006 to help defeat Islamist militants who had seized
Mogadishu, the capital, and to restore power to a
U.N.-recognized transitional government.
Since then, the militants have shifted underground, launching an
insurgency that has killed hundreds of Somalis and displaced
600,000. U.S. officials have accused the Islamists of harboring
terrorists, including suspects from the 1998 Al Qaeda attacks
against U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.
U.S. officials defended Monday's attack.
"The United States is going to go after Al Qaeda and Al
Qaeda-affiliated operatives wherever we find them," National
Security Council spokesman Gordon Johndroe said aboard Air Force
One as President Bush returned to Washington from Texas.
The main target of the strike was believed to be Hassan Turki,
one of the leaders of Somalia's Islamist militias. Turki was
cited by the U.S. State Department in 2004 for alleged links to
Al Qaeda and is suspected of running military training camps in
Somalia.
"The attack was related to the visit of Turki on Sunday, but
what they bombarded was a civilian place, not a military base,"
said Mahmoud Sheik, a resident of Dobley, the village where the
missile strike took place, who was interviewed by telephone.
Local elders said Turki was in Dobley, which is about five miles
from the Kenyan border, to mediate a dispute between his
militias and government troops, which have been fighting for
control of the area.
A U.S. missile or missiles struck two homes in Dobley shortly
after midnight. The homes were used as a transfer point for
truck shipments of khat, a leafy narcotic substance grown in
Kenya and imported daily to Somalia, local leaders said.
"I awoke to heavy explosions and flashes of light," Said Abdulle,
a local elder, said. "It shook my doors and windows. We ran
outside and hid in the trees."
He said those killed appeared to be civilians. Many residents of
the town have fled, fearing another U.S. strike.
Somalia has been embroiled in clan-based warfare since the 1991
collapse of a military dictatorship. In recent weeks, violence
has shifted from Mogadishu, where thousands of Ethiopian troops
continue to occupy the capital, to the countryside.
Last week, as many as 18 government troops were killed in an
ambush by insurgents in Dinsor, near Baidoa, according to local
officials and insurgent leaders.
Remnants of the Islamic Courts Union, an alliance of religious
leaders that was chased from Mogadishu in 2006, have joined
forces with a group of opposition leaders living in exile in
Eritrea. They have vowed to drive out Ethiopian forces from
Somalia and topple the fragile transitional government.
Recently appointed Prime Minister Nur Hassan Hussein has been
attempting to negotiate with leaders from Islamist factions and
opposition groups to end the violence, but so far little
progress has been reported.
Monday's strike followed similar U.S. attacks last year, in
January and June, against suspected militants. In the January
attack, military officials said they were targeting Fazul
Abdullah Mohammed, who the FBI believes had a role in the 1998
bombings of the U.S. embassies in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam.
He was not killed, officials later confirmed.
|