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Related: Somali gov't controls
Mogadishu
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Government soldiers are seen in
Somalia's capital Mogadishu, Dec. 28, 2006. (Xinhua/AFP
Photo) Photo Gallery
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NAIROBI, Dec. 31 (Xinhua)--Somali Islamist militiamen are on Sunday
fighting Ethiopian and Somali government troops advancing towards their last
major stronghold in the port of Kismayo.
Reports reaching here from the strategic town said artillery fire has been
reported near the town of Jilib , close to Kismayo.
"Fighting has started," a resident of the town of Bulobaley reportedly
said. "Several mortars and rockets have hit the town."
"Most of the mortars and rockets that have hit the town have fallen on
deserted houses. I don't know if there are any wounded," the resident, who
sought anonymity, said.
The Islamists set up a new base in Kismayo shortly after being driven out
of the capital, Mogadishu , last Thursday by Somali and Ethiopian troops.
Sources said Islamist fighters have taken up positions in Jilib, just north
of Kismayo, and residents there are fleeing.
Reports from the region say Ethiopian warplanes have been flying over
Kismayo, and the Islamists may have mined the road to it.
The Islamist militia have vowed to resist the Ethiopian and Somali
government troops who forced them out of the capital on Thursday.
Islamist leader Sheikh Sharif Ahmed has said his forces are "ready to fight
the enemy of Allah" and had only left the capital of Mogadishu "to prevent
bloodshed."
Jilib is a gateway to the south of the country and the Islamist militia are
likely to use the town to block any further advance.
Some 3,000 Islamist fighters are believed to be in Kismayo, some300 km
south-east of Mogadishu , towards the Kenyan border.
Ethiopian artillery and troops officially entered Somalia , joining
fighters loyal to Somalia 's interim government, to repel an Islamist assault on
the government stronghold of Baidoa.
Thousands of civilians in the area around Jilib have been fleeing their
homes in anticipation of heavy fighting.
Kenya has re-enforced security along its border in an effort to prevent
Islamist militiamen from crossing over.
Somalia 's transitional government has called for talks with the Islamists.
But the Islamists say they will not enter any dialogue unless Ethiopian forces
vacate the country.
Somalia has not had an effective central government since 1991,when
warlords overthrew dictator Mohamed Siad Barre.
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