"All our troops in the region are now ready at the front
lines to face their enemy," said Mohamed Mohamud Agaweine, the
military commander for the Council of Islamic Courts in central
Somalia. He said thousands of Islamic fighters were in the region
around Abud-waq, but did not give an exact figure.
Ethiopia, a largely Christian nation, fears the emergence of a
neighboring Islamic state and has acknowledged sending military
advisers here to help Somalia's fragile government. But Ethiopian
Prime Minister Meles Zenawi has repeatedly denied sending a fighting
force, despite widespread witness accounts.
Ahemd Isse Gutaale, a reporter for local radio station HornAfrik,
said the Islamists were using loudspeakers Sunday to call for people
to join the holy war against Ethiopia.
"They were enrolling new volunteers and asked people to stand for
the defense of their country," Gutaale said.
On Saturday, Meles
said he expected legislators to back a resolution giving him
authority to use military force against Somali extremists if they
attack Ethiopia. He also stated that Ethiopia would not seek
approval from the U.N. Security Council or any other body to
defend itself militarily, saying it was Ethiopia's "sovereign
right."
Somalia has been without an effective central government since
warlords toppled dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991 and then
turned on each other, carving much of the country into armed camps
ruled by violence and clan law.
A government was established two years ago with the support of
the U.N. to serve as a transitional body to help Somalia emerge
from anarchy. But the leadership, which includes some warlords
linked to the violence of the past, wields no real power outside
the western city of Baidoa.
The Islamic council, meanwhile, has been steadily gaining
ground since seizing the capital, Mogadishu, in June. The United
States has accused the group of sheltering suspects in the 1998
al-Qaida bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, which
it denies.
Somalia has also been struggling to recover from the
catastrophic floods that have also hit Ethiopia and Kenya. On
Sunday, more than 200 women and children in the devastated town of
Belet Weyne claimed they weren't get enough help to deal with the
disaster.
Also Sunday, a Somali reporter was arrested in Baidoa, said
Mowlid Hagi Abdi, of the Somali Broadcasting Corp. It was not
clear why the reporter was arrested; the government's information
minister did immediately answer his phone. Several journalists
have been arrested recently for reporting about Ethiopian troops
in the country, but they have been released after a few days.
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AP writer Salad Duhul contributed to this report.