Somali military and opposition-allied militias trade fire ahead of anti-government protests

MOGADISHU, June 4 (Reuters) – Government troops and militias allied with the opposition exchanged fire overnight ​and on Thursday morning in Somalia’s capital ‌Mogadishu, damaging property and forcing some civilians to flee, residents told Reuters.
The violence flared up ahead of planned ​protests on Thursday over President Hassan Sheikh ​Mohamud’s decision to remain in office after his ⁠term expired last month. Parliament in March backed ​constitutional changes that potentially allowed Mohamud to extend ​his term by a year and push back an election.
Fighting began around 5 p.m. on Wednesday and continued into ​Thursday morning, with thousands of government troops deployed ​in Mogadishu’s Howlwadag and Abdiasis districts, where they traded fire ‌with ⁠militias supporting the opposition, residents told Reuters.
“A mortar shell landed on my neighbour’s house, injuring a mother. A big house near us is also ​ablaze, mortars ​and other ⁠weapons landed on it,” one resident, Ahmed Ismail, told Reuters early on ​Thursday.
Somalia’s information and defence ministers could ​not be ⁠reached for comment as they did not pick up their calls or respond to messages sent ⁠to ​their phones.

Writing by Elias ​Biryabarema; Editing by Lincoln Feast and Alex Richardson

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