At least three people were killed in twin car bombings in the
Somali capital on Saturday that were claimed by Shabaab Islamists,
police and medics said.
Following the blasts,
witnesses reported hearing gunfire and said the entire area around the
Nasa Hablod Hotel 2 had been sealed off by security forces.
The
twin attacks came just two weeks after a massive truck bomb exploded in
central Mogadishu, killing at least 358 people, making it the deadliest
attack in the troubled country's history.
The
Al-Qaeda-affiliated Shabaab claimed Saturday's bombings in a statement
on its Andalus radio station, saying its fighters had forced their way
into the hotel.
Mogadishu's Aamin ambulance service has
so far removed three bodies from the scene and evacuated 17 wounded,
its director Abdukadir Abdurahman told AFP.
"A car
loaded with explosives went off at the entrance of Nasa Hablod Hotel and
there is gunfire," police official Ibrahim Mohamed told AFP, saying
there was also "a minibus loaded with explosives which went off a nearby
intersection".
An AFP correspondent at the scene also
reported seeing two people lying on the ground but their condition was
not immediately clear.
Mohamed Ahmed Mohamud, who
drives a tuktuk taxi told AFP he saw a soldier stopping a car near the
hotel when the blast went off.
"I was driving in front
of the hotel, a soldier talked to small luxury car then a big blast
went off. Two female passengers were on board, but now I don't know
where they have gone," he said.
Gunfire inside the hotel
"We
can hear the gunfire but it is difficult to know who is fighting, the
forces cordoned off the building and no one can go close to it," said a
witness called Abdulahi Nure.
A taxi driver at the
scene told AFP he saw four bodies being carried away, while another
witness called Yusuf Moalim said a senior police official appeared to be
among the victims, whose car had been near the hotel entrance when the
blast occurred.
The Nasa Hablod 2 is a popular hotel
located in the north of the city whose sister hotel, the Nasa Hablod,
was hit by Shabaab militants in June 2016, in an attack that killed 11
people, including a junior minister.
That attack also
began when a suicide bomber detonated an explosives-laden car outside
the hotel which was then stormed by gunmen, provoking an assault that
lasted several hours and only ended when special forces killed three
attackers inside.
The Shabaab lost their foothold in
Mogadishu in 2011 but have continued their battle to overthrow the
Somali government, launching regular attacks on military, government and
civilian targets in the capital and elsewhere.
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