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Somalia's president swore on Wednesday to intensify his war against insurgents blamed for a suicide bombing at a medical graduation ceremony last week that killed 22 people, including three government ministers. Sheikh Sharif Ahmed's fragile administration controls only a few districts of Mogadishu and comes under near daily attack by rebels including the hard-line al Shabaab group, which Washington says is al Qaeda's proxy in the failed Horn of African state.
Western security agencies say the country has become a safe haven for militants, including foreign jihadists, who are using it to plot attacks across the impoverished region and beyond.
A spokesman for al Shabaab denied the group was responsible for last Thursday's suicide bombing, but few Somalis believed him and the UN special envoy to the country said it was "outrageous" to suggest that anyone else was to blame. Speaking to the commanders of his fledgling naval forces, Ahmed said the rebels had "humiliated" the Somali people.
"We have to be ready to clear them out of the country and restore peace," Ahmed said. "They have decided to kill anyone who does not subscribe to their ideology. But Somalis have realised the trouble caused by these groups." The country has known no peace for almost two decades since the overthrow of a military dictator heralded a period of warlord fiefdoms. But even that era did not witness the bloodletting and violence that Somalis have seen in recent years.
Fighting has killed at least 19,000 Somali civilians since the start of 2007 and driven 1.5 million from their homes, triggering one of the world's worst humanitarian disasters. The chaos has also spilled offshore, where heavily armed Somali pirate gangs have made tens of millions of dollars in ransoms by terrorising commercial shipping in the Indian Ocean and strategic Gulf of Aden which links Europe to Asia. Somalia's navy plans to join foreign militaries that are targeting the sea gangs, but is still in its infancy. Officers have to hire boats from fishermen for their military exercises.

Copyright Reuters, 2009

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