| Ethiopians parade islamic cleric in somalia { January 2007 } Original Source Link: (May no longer be active) http://today.reuters.com/news/articlenews.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2007-02-06T182251Z_01_L06594617_RTRUKOC_0_US-SOMALIA-CONFLICT.xml&WTmodLoc=IntNewsHome_C2_worldNews-5http://today.reuters.com/news/articlenews.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2007-02-06T182251Z_01_L06594617_RTRUKOC_0_US-SOMALIA-CONFLICT.xml&WTmodLoc=IntNewsHome_C2_worldNews-5
Ethiopians parade captured Islamist cleric in Somalia Tue Feb 6, 2007 1:23 PM ET
By Sahra Abdi Ahmed
KISMAYU, Somalia (Reuters) - Ethiopian soldiers paraded on Tuesday a wounded senior cleric captured in south Somalia during the pursuit of remnants of an Islamist movement ousted from Mogadishu in a war over the New Year.
Bearded cleric Sheikh Ahmed Mohamed Madobe -- former Somalia Islamic Courts Council (SICC) chairman for the southern town of Kismayu -- told reporters he suffered more than a dozen bullet wounds after U.S. planes fired on his forest hideout.
Looking shaken and showing a bullet wound on his face, Madobe said the aerial attack killed eight Islamist colleagues. He was caught and given medical treatment by Ethiopian troops.
"All the others were killed. I sustained 13 injuries to my body," he said, appealing to go to hospital.
Washington has acknowledged conducting two air strikes aimed at al Qaeda suspects thought to be hiding among the Islamists.
Guarded by soldiers at a dilapidated former government building, Madobe was allowed to shake hands with elders, friends and relatives, and speak briefly to media.
Madobe said he was treated well by his Ethiopian captors, and called on Somalis to work with the government.
But those comments drew suspicion from a former colleague, who suggested he was being used for propaganda purposes.
"They want to use him to soften us and woo support," the former Islamist militiaman said by telephone from Kismayu.
"It will never work, even if he joins their ranks."
MORE ATTACKS IN MOGADISHU
Somali government forces and their Ethiopian allies ousted the Islamists from their southern strongholds in a two-week offensive that began in late December. They have been pursuing the Islamists in remote parts of south Somalia since.
The government blames Islamist remnants for a wave of guerrilla-style attacks in Mogadishu on both government and Ethiopian positions.
In the latest such strikes on Tuesday, a mortar flew into an open space near the presidential palace, while assailants targeted a Mogadishu hotel with rocket-propelled grenades.
A witness inside Villa Somalia presidential palace during the first attack said it appeared aimed at the white-washed, hilltop compound that houses President Abdullahi Yusuf.
"The mortar hit an open space outside," he said.
In a later attack after dark, two rocket-propelled grenades hit a house close to the Ambassador Hotel where senior government officials stay, Mogadishu police chief Ali Said said.
Police guarding the hotel opened fire, forcing the attackers to flee. "No one was hurt," he said.
While suspicion has fallen squarely on the Islamists, many Mogadishu residents fear the daily violence in the coastal capital may also be due to rivalry between warlords who have returned since the ouster of the SICC.
It ruled most of south Somalia for about six months from June, 2006. Somalia has been without central rule since the 1991 ouster of military dictator.
(Additional reporting by Guled Mohamed in Mogadishu)
(Writing by Andrew Cawthorne; Editing by Fredrik Dahl; nairobi.newsroom@reuters.com; +254 20 224 717)
© Reuters 2007
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