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From Monsters and Critics.com Africa News Mogadishu - An Ethiopian helicopter scouring the Somali capital for insurgents was shot down on Friday and crash-landed near Mogadishu's International Airport, as raging battles continued for a second day in the lawless state. Smoke billowed from the landing site by the seaside airport, after the helicopter was shot down by an anti-aircraft missile, but it was unclear how many people were on the helicopter and if there were any survivors. 'The helicopter was hit by a rocket and then started to smoke very heavily. It began to fall down,' eyewitness Yahya Rageh told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa. A barrage of shelling and gunfire continued in the coastal capital on Friday, a day after Ethiopian-backed government troops began an operation to clear the city of insurgents using helicopters and tanks. Hospital sources said at least eight people were killed in Friday's battles and another 24 were wounded. 'There are eight dead and 24 wounded, but people are also being taken to other hospitals in Mogadishu and the toll could be more than that,' said Dahir Dere, a doctor at Madina hospital. At least 30 people were killed and some 100 wounded on Thursday, in some of the fiercest fighting Mogadishu has seen since the transitional government seized the capital in late December. The Ethiopian operation was meant to purge the city of militants - believed to be a combination of clan members and remnants of an Islamist group that ruled most of the country for six months. Sounds of gunfire filled the air less than one week after the government and elders of the city's dominant Hawiye clan agreed to a ceasefire. The government, attempting to assert its authority over the anarchic Horn of Africa country, has said it would try to pacify the capital before an April 16 EU-backed national reconciliation conference that is set to draw some 3,000 participants. But attacks have been increasingly common since the government took control of Somalia, which has been without effective rule since 1991. Thousands of civilians have fled the capital as a result of renewed fighting, with the UN's refugee agency saying some 57,000 have left since the beginning of February. 'We are escaping with our children to wherever we can get security,' said Mogadishu resident, Mohamed Awale. 'These people are merciless.' Ethiopian president Meles Zenawi said two thirds of his troops had already been withdrawn from Somalia, with an African Union (AU) force of 1,500 moved in to help secure the capital. The AU was hoping for a force of 8,000 but has only managed to garner pledges of half that number. © 2007 dpa - Deutsche Presse-Agentur© Copyright 2007 by monstersandcritics.com. This notice cannot be removed without permission. |