2007 timeline of the War in Somalia
The timeline of events in the War in Somalia during 2007 is set out below.
Incumbents
- President: Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed
- Prime Minister:
- * until 30 October: Ali Mohammed Ghedi
- * 30 October-24 November: Salim Aliyow Ibrow
- * starting 24 November: Nur Hassan Hussein
Timeline
January 1, 2007
On January 1, Islamists abandoned their last stronghold in Kismayo. After their departure, looters took to the streets, but order was restored shortly. The Islamists are reportedly retreating toward the Kenyan border. Kenya has boosted security at the border to prevent them from entering their territory.African and Arab League countries have called on Ethiopia to withdraw its troops from Somalia, but these troops practically constitute the military might of the Interim Government whose head, Ali Mohamed Gedi, insists the Ethiopian troops stay in Somalia until he no longer needs them.
In a move to curb resistance against the come-back of the Interim government, after the take-over of Mogadishu on Friday, Ali Mohammed Gedi swiftly announced the introduction of martial law, but such a measure, taken on the background of what is seen as foreign occupation, is already sparking the organization of guerrilla warfare in the capital.
On December 31, 2006, Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, chairman of the Islamic Courts Union, along with other senior ICU officials in the port city of Kismayu about south of Mogadishu, urged Islamist supporters across the country to initiate an insurgency to wage guerrilla war against the Ethiopian troops backing the Somali transitional government. Ahmed issued the statement after the Muslim Eid prayers on Saturday: "I call on the Islamic Courts fighters, supporters and every true Muslim to start an insurgency against the Ethiopian troops in Somalia. We are telling the Ethiopians in Somalia that they will never succeed in their mission. By Allah, they will fail... We will not allow the Ethiopian troops to stay peacefully in Somalia."
January 2, 2007
- 2 Ethiopian, 1 insurgent, 2 civilians killed
Kenya sealed its Somali border with helicopters, soldiers, and police in order to prevent Islamists from entering. During the course of the day Ethiopian helicopters accidentally bombed a Kenyan border post at Har Har, but did not cause any casualties. The Somali President Abdullahi Yusuf also met with Mwai Kibaki in Mombasa, Kenya.
Prime minister Meles Zenawi said Ethiopia is not able to stay in Somalia because of the high economic burden that would come with a prolonged troop investment. A call for peacekeepers has been made but many countries are reluctant to intervene without a clear mission and are wary of what happened in prior peacekeeping missions.
On January 2, 2007, US Marines operating out of Lamu, Kenya, were said to be assisting Kenyan forces patrolling the border with Somalia with the interception of Islamists.
January 3, 2007
Ethiopian aircraft and attack helicopters struck the town of Doble, Afmadow province, not far from the Kenyan border. The strikes were presumably to hit ICU elements attempting to cross the border. Fighting tailed off after midnight.A return to normality in the capital was furthered by the re-opening of the Mogadishu airport.
January 4, 2007
Unconfirmed reports said six Kenyan herders were killed by Ethiopian aircraft that crossed over the border of Somalia. Cordoning off the border, 20 Kenyan tanks were dispatched to patrol the frontier stretching between Liboi, in Garissa district to Kiunga, Lamu district. Reports said ICU troops were split across Afmadow and Badade districts, and possibly concentrated at the former al-Ittihad al-Islamiya stronghold of Ras Kamboni. TFG and Ethiopian forces reported taking district capital Afmadow, and Dhobley along the Kenyan border, and were presently en route to Badade, the district capital just north of Ras Kamboni. In Nairobi, up to ten of the twenty Somali Members of Parliament in Kenya who were alleged to have ties to the Islamic Courts were taken into custody. One report said five were taken into custody. Another report said ten.Unknown gunmen thought to be Somali Islamists fired shots at a Kenyan security helicopter patrolling near the border with Somalia. The helicopter was flying over the southeastern Kenyan border town of Hulugho. The report did not say if the aircraft was damaged but said gunmen fired small arms from the region of Ras Kamboni, the base for the fleeing Islamists.
In Mogadishu, TFG militias set up checkpoints in the city. At one checkpoint, a group of militia apparently attempted to extort money from the driver of an oil tanker truck. In the ensuing argument, a rocket was fired at the vehicle, injuring at least 2 or 3 people. The vehicle had been carrying dozens of passengers who disembarked before the rocket attack.
January 5, 2007
On January 5, 2007, Sheikh Farah Moallim Mohamud became the highest-ranking member of the Islamic Courts Union to be captured by the Ethiopian-Somali forces. He was apprehended near Beledweyne then later released because of the general amnesty offered to Islamists who surrendered to the government.On January 5, 2007, TFG Defense Minister Col. Barre Aden Shire Hiiraale announced: "Today we will launch a massive assault on the Islamic courts militias. We will use infantry troops and fighter jets... They have dug huge trenches around Ras Kamboni but have only two options: to drown in the sea or to fight and die." Fighting continued January 6 in the jungles south of Kismayo near the Kenyan border, where it was reported the Islamists were holding out armed with over 100 technicals.
Battle of Ras Kamboni
- 16 insurgents, 44 civilians killed
January 6, 2007
On January 6, a crowd of more than 100 rioters gathered near Tarabunka square in Mogadishu. They protested the presence of Ethiopian troops as well as the plans to disarm the populace. Prime Minister Ghedi issued a decision to postpone the disarmament for an indefinite amount of time.January 7, 2007
- 1 Somali soldier, 1 civilian killed
A small skirmish has broken out in the Somali capital Mogadishu between Somali militiamen and the Ethiopian forces killing at least two persons and wounding two others. The clashes came after armed militiamen attacked military vehicles belonged to Ethiopian troops passing in front of the Sahafi hotel in southern Mogadishu. Both the dead and the injured were Somalis. The dead persons were a 13-year-old girl and a TFG soldier who died when his hand grenade accidentally exploded and one of the wounded was an old man who was in serious condition.
January 8, 2007
On January 8, 2007 as the Battle of Ras Kamboni raged, TFG President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed entered Mogadishu for the first time since being elected. It was announced the government would be relocated to Villa Somalia, in Mogadishu, from its interim location at Baidoa. Prof. Ibrahim Hassan Addow, representative of the ICU, speaking from Yemen, said the Islamic Courts were ready to enter negotiations with the Transitional Federal Government. However, TFG President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed categorically refused to hold peace talks at this stage.On January 8 it was reported that an AC-130 gunship belonging to the United States military had attacked suspected al-Qaeda operatives in Southern Somalia. Most casualties were said to be Islamic fighters. The aircraft flew out of its base in Djibouti. Many bodies were spotted on the ground, but the identity of the dead or wounded was not yet established. The targeted leaders were tracked by the use of unmanned aerial vehicles as they headed south from Mogadishu starting on December 28. One attack was made well inland at Hayo, a village halfway between Afmadow and Dhobley. It was also reported that the aircraft carrier USS Dwight D. Eisenhower had been moved into striking distance. Other named US Navy vessels joining the maritime cordon included the USS Anzio and the amphibious landing ship USS Ashland.
On January 8, 2007, to the north of Ras Kamboni, elsewhere in Badhadhe province, an Ethiopian force intercepted Islamist forces in the area of the Kenyan border town of Amuma, Garissa district. Seven vehicles were destroyed. A platoon of Kenyan border police were in the area to enforce the border closure. In Afmadow province, Ethiopia launched airstrikes against targets near Afmadow and Dhobley.
January 9, 2007
- 1 Ethiopian soldier killed
An insurgent attack on government barrack began at 7:30pm, Tuesday, near KM4, which resulted in one soldier dead and six wounded. The firefight lasted an hour.
On January 9, it was reported U.S. special forces and CIA operatives are working with Ethiopian troops on the ground in operations inside Somalia, and have been involved in numerous missions since the beginning of the war. US forces have been operating from Galkayo within Somalia, and from Camp Lemonnier, an American camp established in Djibouti following 9/11.
January 10, 2007
- 1 Somali soldier killed
On January 10, chief of staff to the Somali president, Abdirizak Hassan, stated that the US claimed Al Qaeda suspect Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, one of the FBI's most wanted terrorists, was killed in the AC-130 attack on January 8, as detailed by a US intelligence report. Earlier, a US military official reported that Ethiopian forces provided the targeting information needed for the attack. The official also said that five to 10 people were killed in the airstrikes. However, a Somali official countered that US airstrikes killed 31 civilians. At least four more AC-130 airstrikes were said to have hit Ras Kamboni. Somali politician Abdirashid Mohamed Hidig toured the area and spoke of 50 killed in the attacks. He said additional targets hit include Hayo, Garer, Bankajirow and Badmadowe. The U.S. government denied the additional attacks were made by the US. Ethiopian aircraft are also known to be operating in the combat area. The verification of the death of Mohammed followed private comments made by US Defence Department officials that further airstrikes were possibly being planned. A second planned attack was reportedly called off after losing track of the target.
January 11, 2007
Unknown Somali fighters launched grenades into Hotel Ambassador in Mogadishu, exchanging gunfire with Somali and Ethiopian troops positioned inside the hotel. One of the wounded soldiers is in critical condition and is a personal body guard of Gen. Ali Madobe, the Somali national police chief.On January 11, the American ambassador to Kenya said that the US claimed Al Qaeda suspect Fazul Abdullah Mohammed was actually still alive and that none of the Al Qaeda members were killed in the air attack but some members of the ICU were killed.
January 12, 2007
- 8 insurgents killed
According to Oxfam, a British-based aid agency, 70 herdsmen were killed in recent air raids targeting Islamic militants.
On January 12, TFG Defense Minister Barre Aden Shirre Hiiraale announced Ras Kamboni had fallen to the Somali government and Ethiopian forces after five days of heavy fighting. Remnants of the Islamist forces were being pursued into the nearby forests and fighting would continue. A small team of US forces investigated the site of the US gunship attack to search for information about the identity and fate of the targeted individuals.
In fighting in Mogadishu 8 Islamist fighters are killed.
January 13, 2007
- 9 civilians killed
January 14, 2007
- 13 civilians killed
At least 13 were killed and 12-18 wounded in a militia clash between the Murasade and Hawdle tribes in Goobo, between Hiran and Galgadud regions. Government forces were dispatched to the town.
In Garissa Kenya, police arrested 7 Somalis, suspected of being fleeing Islamic militiamen heading towards Nairobi. One was wounded. 10 others escaped.
January 15, 2007
- 1 Somali soldier, 1 civilian killed
On January 15, it was reported a British SAS team was also on the ground at the Kenyan border looking for the fleeing Al Qaeda suspects.
January 17, 2007
On January 17, 2007, conflicting reports emerged over whether Sheikh Sharif Ahmed had been arrested near the Dadaab refugee camp in the Garissa district of Kenya. Also today, a U.S. official in a press conference said she believed the U.S. AC-130 raid had killed eight soldiers of Aden Hashi Farah Ayro, head of an Islamist militia. Ayro is believed to have been wounded in the attack and perhaps killed.Also on that day, the Assistant Deputy Secretary of Defense for African affairs, Theresa Whelan, clarified the airstrike conducted on January 8 was not the work of the CJTF-HOA, but of another force which she did not specify. The target of the strike was confirmed to be Aden Hashi Farah Ayro, who was believed wounded or possibly dead, while eight members of his group were killed in the attack.
The US ambassador to Kenya, Michael Ranneberger, said the US pledged $40 million to support the deployment of the IGASOM peacekeeping force for Somalia.
January 19, 2007
On January 19, 2007 the pro-Islamic Courts Union website featured a video describing the reformation of the ICU into the Popular Resistance Movement in the Land of the Two Migrations. On January 24, Sheikh Abdikadir was announced to be commander of the PRM in the Banadir region.On the same day, the AMISOM mission was formally defined and approved by the African Union at the 69th meeting of the Peace and Security Council.
January 22, 2007
On January 22, Malawi agreed to send a half-battalion to a battalion for a peacekeeping mission to Somalia.January 23, 2007
On January 23, 2007, Ethiopia began withdrawing from Mogadishu and all other areas in Somalia.January 24, 2007
On January 24, the U.S. admitted to have made a second airstrike, but did not confirm the exact date or location of the strike. Also on that day, Nigeria pledged a battalion to join the Somali peacekeeping mission.January 25, 2007
- 1 Ethiopian soldier killed
January 31, 2007
On January 31, the PRM released a video warning African Union peacekeepers to avoid coming to Somalia, claiming "Somalia is not a place where you will earn a salary - it is a place where you will die."February 1, 2007
The USS Dwight D. Eisenhower was withdrawn by the US and redeployed to the Persian Gulf. Other ships of its carrier strike group, the USS Bunker Hill and the USS Ashland remain off the coast of Somalia.Also on February 1, Burundi committed to the peacekeeping mission, pledging up to 1,000 troops.
February 2, 2007
On February 2, the United Nations Security Council welcomed the advent of the African Union and IGAD-led peacekeeping mission.February 9, 2007
On February 9, a gathering of 800 Somali demonstrators in north Mogadishu, where Islamist support was strongest, burned U.S., Ethiopian, and Ugandan flags in protest of the proposed peacekeeping mission. A masked representative of the resistance group, the Popular Resistance Movement in the Land of the Two Migrations, said Ethiopian troops would be attacked in their hotels; the same group had made a video warning peace-keepers to avoid coming to Somalia. By this date, Uganda, Nigeria, Ghana, Malawi and Burundi had committed to the peacekeeping mission, but the total force was about half of the proposed 8,000-strong force. Uganda had pledged 1,400 troops and some armored vehicles for a mission lasting up to 9 months, and the AU had pledged $11.6 million.February 15, 2007
On February 15, in Houston, Texas, U.S. citizen Daniel Joseph Maldonado was charged with "training from a foreign terrorist organization and conspiring to use an explosive device outside the United States." He had been extradited by Kenyan authorities after he fled there. In the charges, it was alleged he took part in training at camps near Kismayo and Jilib where members of al-Qaeda were present and was willing to become a suicide bomber if he became wounded.In Mogadishu, a mortar and rocket barrage killed at least one person and wounded more than 10. At least five mortar rounds were fired at the Mogadishu seaport. Three landed on the adjacent beach where a teenage boy was killed and others were wounded. Another mortar round landed in the Black Sea neighborhood of Mogadishu. Ethiopian troops, barracked in the old Somali National University campus, responded with a rocket counterattack. Six others were wounded around the city in scattered mortar attacks. It was the first night of violence after two mostly peaceful days in the city.
February 16, 2007
On February 16, Uganda announced it would soon deploy 1,500 well-seasoned troops under the command of Major General Levi Karuhanga. The troops had been training for two years in preparation for the mission.Elsewhere in Somalia on this day:Mogadishu - one man was killed after being robbed for his mobile phone, and a worker at the Libyan embassy was also shot and later died of his wounds. A former Defense Ministry compound, which had been occupied by civilians, was cleared and re-occupied by Somali troops. One man was injured after he pulled a gun on the troops.Baardheere - a gunman attacked two MSF Spain staff. MSF doctors and staff are in the town working to reopen the largest hospital, which had been closed for the past decade. The workers were uninjured. Local tribal leaders pledged their support for the work of MSF in the region.Kismayo - Deputy police commander Abdi Gaab announced that the police force of 1,500 police members securing the city had confiscated a collection of arms, including heavy rounds and explosives.
February 18, 2007
- 1 Somali soldier, 4 insurgents killed
In an ambush in Mogadishu 1 TFG policeman was killed.
February 20, 2007
- 16 civilians killed
February 21, 2007
- 1 civilian killed
February 27, 2007
- 5 civilians killed
March 6, 2007
- 2 insurgents, 1 civilian killed
March 16, 2007
- 7 civilians killed
March 23, 2007
Truce between Ethiopian military forces and tribal clans in Mogadishu.A cargo plane, with 11 people on board, was 2007 Mogadishu TransAVIAexport Airlines Il-76 crash over Mogadishu. An Islamic group claims responsibility for the attack.
March 26, 2007
Huge explosion in an Ethiopian military base in Mogadishu, Ethiopian soldiers respond with indiscriminate fire killing one civilian.March 27, 2007
Unknown gunmen kill the Somali military official Darud Bier in a mosque of Kismayo.Combats between insurgents and Somali police in Beledweyne, two police men injured.
March 29, 2007
At least 30 people died in south and north Mogadishu in violent fighting between Ethiopian forces and Somali insurgents. Ethiopian helicopters attacked rebel positions, while the insurgents were calling on the people of the city over the mosque loudspeakers to resist the Ethiopians. Among the killed were 15 Ethiopian soldiers, the rest were civilians.March 30, 2007
Islamic insurgents shot down an Ethiopian Mi-24 military helicopter in Mogadishu.April 1, 2007
A truce brokered by influential Hawiye-clan elders between the government and the Council of Islamic Courts failed to stop fighting that has left the streets of Mogadishu strewn with dead bodies.April 4, 2007
Amnesty International feared resumption of the indiscriminate attacks that have taken place in the recent days in Mogadishu, resulting in the killing of over 400 civilians. The organization demanded Somalia's President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed, Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, and all armed groups to ensure that their forces strictly abide by international humanitarian law and take all necessary measures to protect civilians.April 21, 2007
At least 165 people have been killed in Mogadishu since April 17, in combats between Ethiopian military forces and Somali insurgents.April 24, 2007
A car bomb exploded outside the Ambassador Hotel in Mogadishu, killing 11 people.A suicide microbus bomb killed 6 people in an Ethiopian military base in Afgoi, 30 km south of Mogadishu.
April 25, 2007
A missile hit a hospital ward, in Mogadishu, packed with civilians wounded in fighting between Islamic insurgents and Ethiopian troops allied to the Somali government.April 26, 2007
Prime Minister Ali Mohammed Ghedi of Somalia's transitional government is claiming victory over insurgents in Mogadishu. But a former member of parliament, Omar Hashi, now in exile in Eritrea and allied with some Islamists fighting the transitional government, denies that the transitional government is in control of the volatile capital.April 28, 2007
Clashes between U.S. backed-Ethiopian forces and fighters aligned with the Islamic Courts Union in the capital Mogadishu are being described as some of the heaviest fighting in the city's history. Humanitarian Crisis Worsens in Somalia: Over three hundred people had been killed over the past two weeks. This comes just three weeks after another series of battles claimed at least a thousand lives.May 3, 2007
Human Rights Watch documented how Kenya and Ethiopia had turned the region into Africa's own version of Guantanamo Bay, replete with kidnappings, extraordinary renditions, secret prisons and large numbers of "disappeared".May 16, 2007
- 4 Ugandan soldiers, 1 civilian killed
May 17, 2007
- 1 Somali soldier killed
June 2, 2007
- 12 insurgents killed
June 2, 2007
- 3 civilians killed
At least 3 people were killed in several shooting attacks in Mogadishu.
June 3, 2007
- 7 civilians, 1 insurgent killed
An Ethiopian military convoy was attacked by a roadside bomb in the north of Mogadishu.
June 22, 2007
- 7 Somali soldiers killed
In Mogadishu an army officer was killed and a second injured when their vehicle was hit by a roadside explosion.
June 26, 2007
- 2 Ethiopian soldiers, 9 civilians killed
In a separate attack two Somalis working for the International Medical Corps relief agency were killed late Wednesday in El-Berde.
July 29, 2007
- 2 Somali soldiers, 2 civilians killed
July 31, 2007
- 1 Somali soldier, 3 civilians killed
At least four people die in the fighting, with heavy machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades.
August 1, 2007
- 4 Ethiopian soldiers, 6 civilians killed
August 9, 2007
- 9 civilians killed
- 2 Somali police officers, 5 civilians killed
August 10, 2007
- 3 civilians killed, 3 TFG government officials, 2 Somali soldiers killed
August 11, 2007
- 2 civilians killed
August 14, 2007
- 11 clan-based government militiamen killed.
- 31 civilians killed
August 15, 2007
- 4 Somali police officers
August 16, 2007
- 3 Somali police officers
August 17, 2007
- 2 civilians killed
August 18, 2007
- 2 civilians killed
- 12 civilians, 4 government militia killed
August 19, 2007
- 1 civilian killed
August 21, 2007
- 2 civilians killed
August 22, 2007
- 1 Ethiopian soldier, 1 Somali soldier killed
August 24, 2007
- 7 insurgents killed, 1 TFG Somali police officer killed
August 26, 2007
- 3 civilians killed
August 28, 2007
- 1 Somali police officer, 4 insurgents, 2 civilians killed
September 1, 2007
- 1 Somali soldiers, 2 civilians killed
September 2, 2007
- 2 Somali soldiers, 2 civilians killed
September 3, 2007
- 4 civilians killed
September 5, 2007
- 4 civilians killed, 2 Somali soldiers and 2 insurgents killed
September 9, 2007
- 3 civilians killed
September 10, 2007
- 12 civilians killed
September 11, 2007
- 1 UN official killed
September 13, 2007
- 5 Somali soldiers killed
An opposition government, consisting of members of the former Islamic Courts Union and other Somali elements met and formed in Asmara, Eritrea. Somalia's interior minister, Mohamed Mohamud Guled, ridiculed the meeting and the opposition forces, saying "We are really close to eradicating them."
September 14, 2007
- 4 Somali police officers, 3 civilians killed
September 15, 2007
- 1 civilian killed
September 16, 2007
- 1 Somali soldier, 1 civilian killed
- 1 insurgent, 3 civilians killed
September 17, 2007
- 2 Somali civilians
September 22, 2007
- 1 Somali intelligence officer, 1 police officer killed
September 23, 2007
- 3 Somali soldiers killed
September 24, 2007
- 4 Somali soldiers, 2 TFG government officials killed
September 26, 2007
- 5 TFG Somali police, 3 insurgents killed
September 27, 2007
- 1 Somali soldier, 2 civilians killed
September 29, 2007
- 45 Somali soldiers, 100 insurgents, 4 civilians killed
- 2 TFG police officers, 3 civilians killed
September 30, 2007
- 1 Somali soldier, 3 civilians killed
- 5 civilians killed
October 2, 2007
- 2 insurgents killed
October 4, 2007
- 1 Somali soldier, 1 insurgent killed, 3 civilians, 1 Ethiopian soldier killed
October 5, 2007
- 2 Somali officials, 2 civilians killed
October 7, 2007
- 3 Somali soldiers killed
- 1 Somali soldier killed
October 11, 2007
- 3 Ethiopian soldiers, 1 insurgent killed
October 16, 2007
- 3 civilians killed
October 17, 2007
- 1 Somali soldier killed
Somalia's Northern regions, which until recently enjoyed a relative peace, are on the verge of entering an era of internecine clan warfare similar to, and may be worse than, what has plagued the southern part of the country
for over a decade.
The Hargeisa-based clan-driven secessionists' northern enclave of Somaliland, in the early hours of October 15, 2007, launched unprovoked armed aggression on the peaceful town of Las Anod, the capital of Sool region in the northern pro-unity State of Puntland. This naked aggression caused the death of at least 12 people and displacement of large residents of the city, as well as injuring unknown number of civilians. The local people are in arms defending their families and their properties against these invaders from their distant stronghold, Hargeisa, which is more than 900 Kilometers from Las Anod.
October 18, 2007
- 3 Somali soldiers, 1 civilian killed
October 19, 2007
- 1 Puntland police officer, 2 insurgents killed
October 21, 2007
- 17 civilians killed
- 7 Ethiopian soldiers, 2 insurgents, 6 civilians killed
October 22, 2007
- 9 Somali soldiers dead
October 23, 2007
- 2 civilians dead
October 25, 2007
- 15 civilians killed
- 4 civilians dead
October 26, 2007
- 2 Somali soldiers killed
October 27, 2007
- 7 Ethiopian soldiers, 11 civilians killed, 2 insurgents killed
- 2 Somali soldiers killed, 2 TFG policemen killed
October 28, 2007
- 5 civilians killed
October 29, 2007
- 1 insurgent killed
October 31, 2007
- 2 civilians killed
- 2 pirates killed
November 1, 2007-November 6, 2007
- 5 Ethiopian, 1 Somali soldier, 5 civilians killed
November 14, 2007
- 10 civilians killed
November 18, 2007
- 5 civilians killed
November 21, 2007
- 2 Somali soldiers killed
November 22, 2007
- 3 civilians killed
November 26, 2007
- 2 Ethiopian soldiers, 2 civilians killed
November 29, 2007
- 15 civilians killed
December 1, 2007
- 2 Somali policemen, 3 civilians killed
December 3, 2007
- 10 civilians killed
December 5, 2007
- 2 Somali soldiers, 1 insurgent killed
December 10, 2007
- 2 civilians killed
December 11, 2007
- 7 Somali militiamen, 3 civilians killed
December 12, 2007
- 3 Somali soldiers, 2 civilians killed
December 13, 2007
- 19 civilians killed
December 15, 2007
- 1 Somali soldier killed
December 17, 2007
- 4 civilians killed, 3 Somali soldiers and 1 insurgent killed.
December 19, 2007
- 3 civilians killed
December 20, 2007
- 12 civilians killed
December 23, 2007
- 5 civilians killed
December 24, 2007
- 1 civilians killed, 1 Somali soldier killed
December 27, 2007
- 1 civilian killed
December 29, 2007
- 1 civilian killed
December 31, 2007
- 8 civilians killed
- 2 Somali soldiers killed
Foreign involvement
Several nations and organizations are involved with the war in Somalia.Here is a brief summary.
African Union
The African Union has pledged troops to assist the TFG under the AMISOM peacekeeping mission.Ethiopia
Ethiopia forces actively assisted the TFG in ousting the ICU from its position of military control of Somalia. They have pledged to leave as rapidly as possible and does not appear to be coordinated with planned African Union troop arrivals.Nobody knows for sure how many Ethiopian troops are stationed in Somalia, and nobody knows how many Somalis have been killed as a result of the Ethiopian military intervention in Somalia. Ethiopia opened an embassy in Mogadishu next to the presidential palace on May 27, 2007. According to Human Rights Watch, Ethiopian forces backing the Somali transitional government violated the laws of war by widely and indiscriminately bombarding highly populated areas of Mogadishu with rockets, mortars and artillery. Its troops on several occasions specifically targeted hospitals and looted them of desperately needed medical equipment. Human Rights Watch also documented cases of Ethiopian forces deliberately shooting and summarily executing civilians.
Kenya
Kenya has sent forces to secure its border with Somalia and maybe a middle man between the TFG and former leaders of the ICU.United Nations
Promises humanitarian relief.Since June 15, 2007 a UN mission in Somalia focused on the needs of the hundreds of the displaced Somalis. Deadly clashes have forced 490,00 Somalis to flee Mogadishu between February 2007 and May 2007.
United States
The United States had assisted Somali, Ethiopian and Kenyan forces with intelligence, advisors and limited military strikes from bases in those countries and from Djibouti. They have offered money to support a peace keeping force. The involvement of the United States is part of their War on Terrorism and specifically al-Qaeda.On February 23, 2007, The New York Times reported that the US government has been secretly training Ethiopian soldiers, for several years, in camps near the Ethiopia-Somalia border. Many of these soldiers participated in the Ethiopian invasion of Somalia. The Times quoted unnamed US government officials who said the training program and other support for Ethiopia's government began after a failed CIA effort to arm and finance Somali "warlords."
US intervention against Al Qaeda
Somali Prime Minister Gedi declared one of the key objectives of the offensive on Kismayo was the capture of three alleged al-Qaeda members, suspects wanted for the 1998 United States embassy bombings in East Africa: Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, Saleh Ali Saleh Nabhan and Abu Taha al-Sudani.The United States Fifth Fleet's multinational maritime task force, Combined Task Force 150, based out of Bahrain is patrolling off the Somali coast to prevent terrorists launching an "attack or to transport personnel, weapons or other material," said Commander Kevin Aandahl. The announcement did not say what particular ships comprised the cordon, but the task force includes vessels from Canada, France, Germany, Pakistan, the UK and the US. US ships of CTF-150 include the Arleigh Burke-class destroyer USS Ramage and the Ticonderoga-class cruiser USS Bunker Hill.