Originally published by the Voice of America (www.voanews.com).
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Somalia Government Troops Capture Town Held By Islamists
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?r=279&c=652747&l=1009&ctl=14567FF:A6F02AD83191E1606A404C1402299C949574F7DCC14957C0 Monday's attack
appears to be first major advance against Islamic Courts Union by
Somali government Islamist militia leaders in Somalia say government
troops have taken control of a town near the government base of Baidoa
that had been held by militias loyal to the rival Islamic Courts
Union.







Islamic leader Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed speaks during a news
conference, Monday, Oct. 9, 2006 in the Somali capital MogadishuThe
town of Burahakaba is located on the road that runs from the capital,
Mogadishu, which the Islamic Courts Union controls, to Baidoa, the
current seat of the internationally backed transitional government.

According to media reports, citing eyewitnesses, Somali interim
government forces, backed by what media reports said were Ethiopian
troops, overran the town, forcing fighters from the Islamic Courts
Union to flee.

Ethiopia has repeatedly denied any troop presence in Somalia.

Somali Foreign Affairs Minister Esmael Mohamud Hurreh would not
comment on the reported attack. He tells VOA that, it is the
transitional federal government, which he refers to as TFG, that has
the legitimacy in the volatile country.

"Our administration relies on a system where authority and resource
division is actually done by the people. It is the government of the
people, in actual sense, not in theoretical sense," he said. " A lot
of people are asking for that, and seeing that the Islamic Courts are
trying now to stop that, and to really see these movement of Islamic
Courts coincide with the beginning of the TFG administrative
structures."

The Islamic Courts Union, in turn, argues that its aim is to bring
peace and stability to Somalia, and that the Courts have the best
interest of the people in mind.







Militiamen of the Islamic Court in Mogadishu patrol the streets of
MogadishuThe Courts union first started expanding control in June,
when its militias control of the capital, Mogadishu. It has since
captured much of southern Somalia.

Monday's attack appears to be the first major advance against the
Islamic Courts Union by the Somali government.

Somalia's interim government and the Union of Islamic Courts have been
trying to negotiate a peace agreement that would see some sort of a
power-sharing arrangement between them. The two met in Sudan last
month, and are scheduled to finalize their agreement at the end of
this month.

The two sides are also deadlocked over the issue of a regional
peacekeeping force that the Inter-Governmental Authority on
Development has offered, and, which the African Union has endorsed.

The Courts are vehemently opposed to having foreign peacekeepers in
Somalia, while the government supports such a move. The Courts also
maintain that Ethiopian troops have crossed over into Somalia to
support the Somali government, a claim the government denies.

Since civil war broke out in 1991, militias loyal to clan and
sub-clan-based factions have controlled different parts of the
country, with no central authority to provide law and order and even
basic services to the population.

A transitional Somali parliament was formed in Kenya more than a year
ago following a peace process.