14 Somali Civilians Killed in Clashes in Southwestern Somalia

At least 14 Somali civilians were killed and three others wounded

following a shooting between Ethiopian troops and al-Shabab fighters

in southwestern Somalia on Sunday, officials and witnesses said.

Officials in Bay region have accused the Ethiopian troops of

“indiscriminate” killing after clashing with al-Shabab fighters in

Wardinle village, 30 kilometers west of Baidoa town.

A Somali lawmaker, Ibrahim Isak Yarow, who visited the village Monday

told VOA he counted the bodies of 13 civilians killed at the scene

while another died on the way to the hospital. He said all the victims

were civilians.

“An awful tragedy has happened in Wardinle,” he said.

Yarow, a former deputy minister of security who represents the area,

said he interviewed the villagers who told him Ethiopian troops passed

through the village late Sunday in an apparent hunt for al-Shabab. He

said the troops told the villagers they were heading toward an area

they suspect al-Shabab may be hiding just three kilometers away.

He said the troops again were passing through the village on their

return when they asked the villagers if they have seen any al-Shabab

fighters.

As the troops were leaving the village, they came under fire, which

resulted in a firefight that lasted for 30 minutes, Yarow said.

“Al-Shabab sneaked into the village, whether they wanted food or

whether they wanted to kidnap people, it’s not clear, but they fired

upon the troops.”

Yarow said the villagers told him that after al-Shabab fled, the

Ethiopian troops went into a house where there was a wedding ceremony,

and shot and killed civilians. He said the troops moved on to a second

house where religious men were reciting the Quran over a sick, elderly

man and shot him and others.

He said all the 14 people killed were men, between 40 and 80 years of age.

Yarow said one of those killed was the chief of the village, Aden

Barire, who was a relative of his.

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