December 10, 2006:
Ethiopian trainers and
combat troops are helping the militias in Puntland and Somaliland (two independent
parts of northern Somalia) to resist takeover attempts by Islamic
militants.
December 9, 2006: Ethiopian troops continue
to battle Islamic Courts gunmen 80 kilometers southwest of Baidoa in
Somalia.
December 8, 2006: A number of firefights were
reported inside Somalia between the Islamic Courts militia and units loyal to
Somalia's Transitional Government. The Islamic Courts claimed that their
fighters also engaged an Ethiopian military force of 1800 troops near the town
of Dinsoor. The Islamic Courts claimed that its fighters defeated the Ethiopian
force. The claim of victory was disputed by a Transitional Government. However,
there was no dispute that a serious fight took place a Dinsoor. Dinsoor is
approximately 100 kilometers from Baidoa, the Transitional Government's
capital.
The Islamic Courts also accused Ethiopian
troops of shelling an Islamist militia position near Bandiradley in Somalia's
central area. The Islamic Courts claimed the artillery attack took place on
December 6. Bandiradley is about 600 kilometers north of Mogadishu.
The Ethiopian government denied the reports
that it had troops fighting inside Somalia, calling them "rumors." Ethiopia has
said that it has military trainers in Somalia, which are providing training
support to the Transitional Government.
December 6, 2006: Eritrea claimed that eight
Ethiopian soldiers crossed the Ethiopia. Eritrea border and defected to
Eritrea. The Eritreans said that the Ethiopian soldiers were "protesting" the
Ethiopian "invasion" of Somalia. At least five of the soldiers were allegedly
Oromos (Moslems from eastern Ethiopia). The soldiers may well have defected
(ethnic Oromo defections have happened before) but the claim that the defectors
were "protesting" Ethiopia's action in Somalia sounds just a little too
politically convenient.
The UN called for an "African
protection and training mission" to deploy inside Somalia. The troops and
personnel would be supplied by the African Union (AU) and from the East African
cooperation group, the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD). The
UN-AU-IGAD group would be named IGASOM (the SOM indicating Somalia). The force
will be authorized to use force. The peacekeepers are intended to help
Somalia's Transitional Government. IGASOM will have up to 8000 troops and
its initial mandate will run six months. The UN resolution does not permit
peacekeeping troops from Kenya, Ethiopia, or Djibouti (Somalia's immediate
neighbors. That noted, this UN position is very much in line with Ethiopia's
call for an African peacekeeping force in Somalia. Ethiopia is aligned with
Somalia's Transitional Government. A Ugandan government spokesman said that
Uganda would probably contribute a battalion to the force. The question is, who
in Africa, outside of Uganda, will be able to send troops? The winding down of
the UN mission in Burundi has freed up some potential troops from South Africa,
but those may be committed to an enhanced AU force in Sudan's Darfur. South
Africa also has on-going commitments in the Congo.
The UN and Eritrea confirmed an earlier
report from last month that two UN contractors were injured when the vehicle
they were traveling in detonated a landmine inside the Temporary Security Zone
(TSZ). The incident took place on November 8. The vehicle hit the mine on a
road that had been cleared of landmines. Who did it? No one knows. Eritrea has
been actively harassing UN observers in the Ethiopia-Eritrea border area.
December 5, 2006: The Ethiopian government
claimed that two members of the rebel Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF)
surrendered. The claim was disputed by an ONLF spokesman. The ONLF is an ethnic
Somali rebel group.