Truro News

Government blames al- Qaida- linked al- Shabab for Saturday’s attack on crowded street in Mogadishu

- By Abdi Guled

MOGADISHU, Somalia — More than 300 people are dead after the truck bombing in Somalia’s capital and scores of others remain missing, authoritie­s said Monday, as the fragile Horn of Africa nation reeled from one of the world’s worst attacks in years.

As funerals continued, the government said the death toll is expected to rise.

Another nearly 400 people are injured, many badly burned, after Saturday’s bombing targeted a crowded street in Mogadishu. Somalia’s government has blamed the al- Qaida- linked al- Shabab, Africa’s deadliest Islamic extremist group, which has not commented.

As hospitals and families continued to count the dead, nearly 70 people remained missing, based on accounts from relatives, said police Capt. Mohamed Hussein. He said many bodies were burned to ashes in the attack.

More than 70 critically injured people were airlifted to Turkey for treatment as internatio­nal aid began to arrive, officials said. Nervous relatives stood on the tarmac at the airport, praying for the recovery of their loved ones.

Overwhelme­d hospitals in Mogadishu have struggled to assist other badly wounded victims, many burned beyond recognitio­n. Exhausted doctors struggled to keep their eyes open as the screams from victims or newly bereaved families echoed in the halls.

The attack is one of the deadliest attacks in sub- Saharan Africa, larger than the Garissa University attack in Kenya in 2015, in which 148 died, and the U. S. Embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998, in which about 219 were killed.

Countries including Kenya and Ethiopia have offered to send medical aid in response to what Somali’s government has called a “national disaster,” said Informatio­n Minister Abdirahman Osman.

A plane carrying a medical team from Djibouti arrived to evacuate others wounded, said Mohamed Ahmed, an official with Somalia’s health ministry. It was the second team of foreign doctors to arrive in Mogadishu.

Al- Shabab, which for more than a decade has waged war in Somalia, often targets high- profile areas of the capital. Earlier this year, it vowed to step up attacks after both the Trump administra­tion and Somalia’s recently elected president announced new military efforts against the group.

The country’s Somali- American leader, President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed, has declared three days of mourning and joined thousands of people who responded to a desperate plea by hospitals to donate blood.

Mogadishu, a city long accustomed to deadly bombings by alShabab, was stunned by the force of Saturday’s blast. The explosion shattered hopes of recovery in an impoverish­ed country left fragile by decades of conflict, and it again raised doubts over the government’s ability to secure the seaside city of more than 2 million people.

The United States has condemned the bombing, saying “such cowardly attacks reinvigora­te the commitment of the United States to assist our Somali and African Union partners to combat the scourge of terrorism.”

BEIRUT — A U. S.- backed Kurdish- led force battling the Islamic State group in Syria will be in control of Raqqa “within a few days” after attacking the last militant- held pocket of the city, a spokesman for the force said Monday.

Mustafa Bali of the Kurdishled Syrian Democratic Forces, or SDF, also said that fierce street battles were underway near the main hospital in Raqqa, once the de facto capital of the extremists’ self- proclaimed caliphate.

Later Monday, a Kurdish SDF commander said the situation has calmed down in the city in order to allow the remaining civilians to leave the area.

SDF fighters launched an operation to retake the last IS- held pocket of the city after some 275 militants and their family members surrendere­d over the weekend.

The extremists still hold about 10 per cent of Raqqa, including the hospital and the main stadium, which is believed to be used by the militants as a jail and an arms depot.

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