UN calls for probe in clashes after 20 killed in northern Somalia

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Heavy fighting in Somalia’s breakaway region of Somaliland continued into a second day on Tuesday, leaving at least 20 people dead as the UN urged a probe into the clashes.

The violence broke out on Monday between government forces and armed militias in the contested town of Las Anod in the self-declared republic.

The town is claimed by both Puntland, a northern state in Somalia, and Somaliland, which broke away from the rest of the country in 1991 but has not been recognised internationally.

“The fighting has intensified this morning,” Mohamed Osman, a local clan militia leader, told AFP by phone.

Troops belonging to Somaliland’s army were “trying to enter the town”, he said.

The violence erupted hours after elders from the Sool region, where Las Anod is located, issued a statement pledging support for “the unity and integrity of the Somali Federal Republic” and urging Somaliland authorities to withdraw their forces from the area.

The UN said Tuesday that at least 20 people had died in the clashes and called for an investigation.

“At least 20 people have been killed, and an estimated 119 others injured in Las Anod — among them children — in fighting between the security forces and members of a local clan,” UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk said in a statement.

“I am concerned by reports that the clashes are continuing today with additional claims of new casualties,” he said.

Osman said the toll stood at 22, most of them civilians. Abdirahman Sugulle, a traditional elder in the town, also gave the same figure.

Somalia’s President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud described the violence as “unfortunate” and called on all parties to lay down their weapons and hold negotiations.

“Resolution will never be attained with guns,” he said.