SOMALIA:Somali warlords agreed yesterday to merge their forces into a new national army to tame the anarchic nation. However, fighting outside the presidential palace where they met showed how hard that task will be.
Warlord gunmen trying to force their way inside fought Somali troops, and the shoot-out - the kind of clash commonplace in Mogadishu for the last 15 years - killed a handful of people.
It underscored the huge challenge President Abdullahi Yusuf's fledgling government faces to bring peace and security to the Horn of Africa nation after ousting Islamists who had held the capital and the south for half a year.
"The warlords have promised to hand over their weapons and militias to the government," government spokesman Abdirahman Dinari said, adding that a committee had been formed to work out details of what many see as a key step in calming Somalia.
Mr Dinari said warlord gunmen tried to force their way inside Villa Somalia, the presidential compound. "Fighting ensued. It went on for nearly four minutes," he said. Two militiamen were killed and four wounded, Mr Dinari said, while a warlord ally who declined to give his name said seven warlord gunmen died and 11 were wounded. The villa, where Mr Yusuf came on Monday in his first visit to the city since 1994, despite being elected president two years ago, is protected by Ethiopian and Somali government troops who ousted the Islamists late in December.
The Islamists, who wanted to impose Sharia law, had driven out the warlords from much of southern Somalia after taking control of Mogadishu in June following four months of fighting. Now the Islamists are on the run. British-based aid agency Oxfam said air raids to pursue them and their suspected al-Qaeda allies hiding in southern Somalia had mistakenly killed 70 nomadic herdsmen.