Ethiopian troops quit bases in Mogadishu
By Ibrahim Mohamed and Abdi Guled
MOGADISHU (Reuters) - Ethiopian troops supporting Somalia's Western-backed government quit four of their main bases in Mogadishu Tuesday, heralding an uncertain new chapter for the anarchic Horn of Africa nation.
Many residents were overjoyed by the departure of soldiers they saw as occupiers, even though some analysts fear it will leave a power vacuum and trigger more violence by Islamist rebels who have been battling the government and each other.
"We were chanting 'Praise be to Allah', who made the troops leave our area," local man Hussein Awale told Reuters as hundreds of people gathered at one of four military facilities in the north of the city that were abandoned by the soldiers.
Insurgents have been fighting the interim government and Ethiopian forces for two years, since Addis Ababa sent soldiers to help drive a sharia courts group out of Mogadishu.
More than 16,000 civilians have been killed and one million have been forced from their homes. But frustrated by rifts in the Somali administration, and the cost of the operation, Ethiopia has decided to withdraw its estimated 3,000 troops.
At a farewell ceremony in the presidential palace, Somali Prime Minister Nur Hassan Hussein confirmed the pullout was underway and said Ethiopian officers were going to the airport.
"We are very thankful to Ethiopia for sacrificing its lives and its economy for the safety of Somali government," he said.
Ethiopian commander Colonel Gabre Yohanes said the forces had been crucial in pushing forward a fledgling peace process. Continued...
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