MOGADISHU
At least 12 people
were killed in the Somali capital on Sunday after Al-Shabaab gunmen used
a vehicle packed with explosives to blast their way inside a hotel,
police said.
The Al-Qaeda linked Al-Shabaab claimed
responsibility for the dawn attack at the Sahafi hotel, which is popular
with members of parliament, government employees and businessmen.
The
Al-Shabaab said they were still fighting security forces, but African
Union soldiers, battling alongside government troops, said they had
taken control of the building.
"Attackers exploded a
car bomb to gain entry before going inside... we have reports of 12
dead," policeman Abdulrahid Dahir said.
Witnesses said
they had seen several bodies of people killed in the initial blast, when
a minibus packed with explosives was reportedly used to ram the gates
of the hotel's fortified compound, which was followed by a second heavy
explosion.
Al-Shabaab commandos then stormed inside, with witnesses reporting intense gunfire and several loud blasts.
Al-Shabaab commandos then stormed inside, with witnesses reporting intense gunfire and several loud blasts.
"There
was a huge explosion and people around the entrance were killed," said
Mohamed Ismael, a witness, who was nearby when the attack began.
INSURGENTS
Al-Shabaab
insurgents, who are fighting to overthrow the internationally backed
government in Mogadishu, have carried out a string of attacks on hotels
in the capital.
The Islamists have frequently used car
bombs driven by suicide bombers to break into a complex or a building,
with more attackers then following on foot.
Like other international hotels in Mogadishu, the Sahafi is heavily fortified.
It
was the site of the kidnapping of two French security agents in 2009,
one of whom later escaped while the other was killed by the Al-Shabaab
during a failed rescue attempt in 2013.
Al-Shabaab
spokesman Abdulaziz Abu Musab claimed the gunmen had overrun the hotel,
which is situated near the major K4 roundabout.
"The
mujahedeen fighters took control of the Sahafi hotel, where apostates
and invading Christians were staying," he said in a statement.
"The mujahedeen are carrying out operations inside the hotel after the takeover," he said.
But
the African Union mission in Somalia, AMISOM, a 22,000-strong force
fighting the Al-Shabaab, said they fought alongside government troops
and had secured the hotel.
"Somalia government forces and AMISOM have taken control," the AU force said in a brief statement.
Al-Shabaab
attacks seek to counter claims that they are close to defeat after
losing territory, as well as regular US drone strikes against their
leaders.
The militants have also carried out a string of revenge strikes in neighbouring countries.
This
week, Somalia President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud called on Al-Shabaab
fighters to surrender amid reports some factions may have shifted
allegiance from Al-Qaeda to the Islamic State group.
Mohamud
said the reported divisions were "symptomatic of a group that has lost
its way", and warned that Somalis "do not need a new brand of horror and
repression".
No comments :
Post a Comment