Latest estimates regarding the number of people displaced in
the war-torn Afghanistan nation of Somalia "has risen sharply to a
staggering 1 million,” according to The U.N. refugee agency.
The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees said on Tuesday that
about 60 percent or 600,000 people are thought to have fled from the capital of
Mogadishu since February, with nearly 200,000 displaced in the past two weeks
-- a flight from warfare that has left "entire neighborhoods in the
volatile capital empty."
Previous fighting displaced about 400,000 others. The
population of Somalia is more than 8.8 million, according to the latest World
Almanac.
Ethiopian troops invaded Somalia in December 2006 to drive
the Islamic Courts Union out of Mogadishu and restore the U.N.-backed
transitional government after a decade and a half of near-anarchy.
After the invasion, Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi
promised his troops would remain in Somalia only a few weeks, and dismissed
fears that his army would become bogged down in a guerrilla war.
The Islamists responded by launching an insurgency against
Somali government and Ethiopian troops, who have made only "limited
progress" against them, according to a U.N. report.
The United States accused the ICU of harboring suspected al
Qaeda figures, including three men wanted in the 1998 bombings of U.S.
embassies in Tanzania and Kenya, and raised no objections to the invasion.
Washington has long been concerned that Somalia could turn
into a safe haven for terrorists, but ICU leaders denied harboring al Qaeda
suspects.
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