1984 Borama school kids

I feel sorry for them, not only have they been forgotten, the country that murdered them through a war crime while they were attending school is now being given a strip of land in their ancestral region.

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Ethiopian jets kill 40 in Somalia​


By CHARLES MITCHELL

Jan. 30, 1984

Ethiopian fighter bombers destroyed a high school, shops and homes in raids Monday against two Somali border towns, killing at least 40 people -- mostly students -- and wounding 80 others, Somalia said.

The raids against Borama and Goroyo-Awl, 5 miles from the disputed Ogaden region, were the worst flareup in the simmering war between the east African nations since an abortive Ethiopian invasion of central Somalia last July.

The Radio Mogadishu broadcast, monitored in Nairobi, quoted 'an emergency announcement' by the Somali Defense Ministry as saying that six Soviet-made MiG-21 and MiG-23 fighter bombers leveled a high school, shops and civilian homes in the dusty border towns during the 20-minute bombing runs.

'The latest reports received until now say that 40 people were killed and 80 others injured,' the ministry said.

There was no immediate confirmation of the Somali claims from the Marxist regime of Ethiopian leader Lt. Col. Mengistu Haile Mariam, but diplomats said similiar 'emergency announcements' in the past were usually correct.

Diplomats familiar with the Horn of Africa region said the air attacks could be in retaliation for guerrilla raids this month on the vital railroad linking the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa with the Red Sea port of Djibouti.

The rail line, which carries 60 percent of Ethiopia's exports, has been closed since Jan. 21 after attacks on a passenger and a freight train that left at least 29 people dead.

A Somali-based guerrilla group, called the Western Somali Liberation Front, has claimed responsibility for the train attacks.

The Somali Defense Ministry said the Ethiopian aircraft struck in mid-morning, hammering the small border towns where nomads in the desert region come to get water.

The statement said most of the killed and injured were students at the Borama regional high school.

The aircraft then flew to Goroyo-Awl but were driven off by Somali air defenses. Damage at Goroyo-Awl was described by the ministry as light.

 
If you took any Somali person from the 1970s and time-travelled them to the present they would have the same experience as Mark Wahlberg returning to America in the Planet of The Apes;

 

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