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Troops hunt insurgents in emptying Somali capital

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By Aweys Yusuf

MOGADISHU, Nov 11 (Reuters) - Somali and Ethiopian troops shut down Mogadishu's main market in a search for Islamist insurgents on Sunday after fighting that has killed at least 60 people and driven tens of thousands from the Somali capital.

Though there were no reports of clashes, Ethiopian soldiers patrolled the north of the chaotic city while their allies from the interim Somali government kept watch on the south after the latest flare-up of the insurgency.

Ethiopian forces last week struck areas seen as favourable to the insurgents with tanks and artillery in reprisal for the killing of at least three of their soldiers, whose bodies were dragged through the streets.

Mogadishu's main market, Bakara, was closed for a second day on Sunday. The government has long viewed the market as an insurgent stronghold and frequently shut it down.

"We believe a lot of wounded rebels are hiding in Bakara and surrounding areas," said a senior policeman who declined to be named.

Streets in neighbourhoods hit during last week's fighting were deserted, a Reuters reporter said. Local human rights groups estimate a tenth of the city's 1 million people fled this week.

"More than 60 civilians have been killed in fighting that took place on Thursday and Friday, and more than 100,000 people fled. More than 200 people have been wounded," said Abdullahi Alas Jimale of the Ismail Jimale Human Rights Organisation.

Hundreds of thousands of Somalis have fled the capital this year during fighting between the insurgents and the interim Somali government.

That has strained scant resources in outlying villages, where the insecurity has made it hard for aid agencies to work.

Rights groups have criticised the Ethiopians for failing to distinguish between civilian and insurgent targets, but residents say it is difficult to tell who is who in a city where most men have firearms.

The government of President Abdullahi Yusuf is the 14th attempt to impose central rule on the Horn of Africa nation since it became synonymous with anarchy, following the ouster of dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991. (Writing by Bryson Hull, Editing by Matthew Tostevin)

SOURCE: Reuters, November 11, 2007