Somali insurgents soften stance on Mogadishu airport closure
Mogadishu- Somali Islamist insurgent group al-Shabaab, which
last month ordered the closure of Mogadishu's main airport, said
Thursday it may allow air traffic to once again land.
"Our decision to close the airport is not Holy Koran verse; we can
change our decision to close the airport if the people come to
negotiate," Sheikh Muktar Robow told reporters in a teleconference.
Al-Shabaab last month vowed to shoot down any plane that landed
after it said the airport was being used to offload military equipment
for African Union peacekeepers and Ethiopian soldiers.
Some flights have nonetheless landed, prompting shelling by al- Shabaab that has killed civilians in surrounding areas.
Almost daily battles have blighted the Horn of Africa nation since
Ethiopian troops invaded in 2006 to kick out the Islamist regime and
put the transitional federal government back in power.
Islamist insurgents have since fought back, taking over the key
port town of Kismayo and hammering Ethiopian, government and AU
peacekeeping troops.
Civilians have borne the brunt of the fighting, with aid agencies
now estimating almost 10,000 have died since the insurgency began in
early 2007.
The Horn of Africa nation has been plagued by chaos and clan-based
civil war since dictator Mohamed Siad Barre was toppled in 1991. (dpa)