
Thursday, October 26, 2006
They drove into Sakow on Wednesday evening moving closer to the seat of the interim administration in Baidoa.
Islamists are reported to be massing to the east of Baidoa, where government troops have been seen building defences with the aid of Ethiopian soldiers.
The opposing sides are due to meet in Sudan next week for peace talks.
Somalia has been in the grip of warlords and militias for years and has not had a functioning national government since 1991.
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Islamist commander Sheikh Hassan Derow |
The Union of Islamic Courts (UIC) has consolidated its control over much of southern Somalia after seizing the capital, Mogadishu, in June.
The UIC was set up by businessmen who wanted to impose law and order, and their gunmen have become Somalia's strongest fighting force.
Pressure
"It was simple because we did not encounter any fighting when we entered the town," Sheikh Hassan Derow, an Islamist commander told AFP news agency.
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Residents of the town which is 170km south-west of Baidoa, said pro-government forces fled to the north.
The BBC's East Africa correspondent Adam Mynott says the pressure is building towards a confrontation between the two sides.
But the UIC has said it does not intend to attack the transitional government.
Ethiopia has said that its only forces in Somalia are there for training purposes.
Eritrea, which is deeply hostile to Ethiopia, is also alleged to have sent troops to Somalia to reinforce the UIC.
Observers fear that Somalia could become engulfed in a wider war for control of the Horn of Africa.
Source: BBC, Oct. 26, 2006