People take part in a demonstration on October 18, 2017 in Mogadishu,
after a massive truck bomb attack killed at least 358 people and left
300 injured. AFP PHOTO | MOHAMED ABDIWAHAB
MOGADISHU
Somalia's deadliest
ever attack, a truck bomb in the capital Mogadishu, has now killed 358
people with 228 more injured, the government said late Friday, a major
jump in the fatality toll.
A truck packed with
explosives blew up in Hodan on October 14, destroying some 20 buildings
in the bustling commercial district, leaving scores of victims burned
beyond recognition.
Several experts told AFP the truck was probably carrying at least 500 kilos (1,100 pounds) of explosives.
"The
latest number of casualties 642 (358 dead, 228 injured, 56 missing).
122 injured ppl flown to Turkey, Sudan & Kenya," Somali Minister of
Information Abdirahman Osman tweeted.
WOUNDED
The figures mark a sharp increase in the toll, which earlier this week was put at 276 dead and 300 wounded.
The
attack has overwhelmed Somalia's fragile health system, and allies from
the US, Qatar, Turkey and Kenya have sent planeloads of medical
supplies as well as doctors, with all except the US also evacuating some
of the wounded.
Death tolls are notoriously difficult to establish in Mogadishu, with families often quickly taking victims away to be buried.
There
has been no immediate claim of responsibility, but Al-Shabaab, a
militant group aligned with Al-Qaeda, carries out regular suicide
bombings in Mogadishu in its bid to overthrow Somalia's
internationally-backed government.
The group has a history of not claiming attacks whose scale provokes massive public outrage.
FORENSIC TESTS
Already more than 100 unidentified people have been buried, who were burned beyond recognition.
While
the rapid burial is partly due to Islamic culture, the Somali
government also has no proper morgue nor the capability to carry out
forensic tests to identify the victims.
Somali
President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed vowed Wednesday to step up the war
against Al-Shabaab, saying that the attack showed "that we have not done
enough to stop Shabaab."
"If we don't respond to this
now, the time will surely come when pieces of flesh from all of us are
being picked up off the ground. We need to stand up together and fight
Al-Shabaab who continue massacring our people," he said.
However
it was unclear what Farmajo — who came into office eight months ago
also vowing to eliminate Al-Shabaab — planned to do to stop the
militants from carrying out such attacks.
The previous most deadly attack in Somalia killed 82 people and injured 120 in October 2011.
No comments :
Post a Comment