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Roadside bomb kills Somali police | |
(about 2 hours later) | |
At least five Somali policemen have been killed in a roadside bomb blast in the capital, Mogadishu. | |
The officers were driving near a road junction in the south of the city when their vehicle was blown up. | |
Meanwhile, pro-government forces have regained control of a police station which had been overrun by Islamist insurgents, witnesses say. | |
At least three people were killed in the fighting in the Yaqshid area, which was seized by Islamists a month ago. | |
A government member of parliament, Salad Ali Jelle, was quoted by the AP news agency as saying there was fighting during the night. | |
But, he said, the rebels were forced to flee the area about 0800 local time (0500 GMT) and pro-government forces were now in control. | |
At least 60,000 people have fled the recent fighting around Mogadishu, which has left at least 200 people dead. | At least 60,000 people have fled the recent fighting around Mogadishu, which has left at least 200 people dead. |
The internationally-recognised government only controls parts of Mogadishu and other pieces of territory. | |
Islamist radicals control much of southern Somalia. | Islamist radicals control much of southern Somalia. |
The BBC's Mohammed Olad Hassan in Mogadishu says the loss of the police base means it will be harder for the Islamists to defend other parts of north Mogadishu. | The BBC's Mohammed Olad Hassan in Mogadishu says the loss of the police base means it will be harder for the Islamists to defend other parts of north Mogadishu. |
The latest fighting comes after President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed ordered a fight-back against al-Shabab guerrillas. | The latest fighting comes after President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed ordered a fight-back against al-Shabab guerrillas. |
He says the group, accused of having links to al-Qaeda, has in its ranks foreigners who have fought in Iraq and Afghanistan. | He says the group, accused of having links to al-Qaeda, has in its ranks foreigners who have fought in Iraq and Afghanistan. |
Mr Ahmed, a moderate Islamist, was elected by a unity government in January as part of a UN-backed peace initiative. | |
Hardline Islamist groups want to impose a stricter version of Islamic law and are demanding the departure from Somalia of the 4,300-strong African Union peacekeeping force. | |
Somalia has not had a functioning national government since 1991, and years of fighting have left some three million people - a third of the population - needing food aid. |
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