Arab News

At least 90 dead in terrorist truck bomb blast in Somalia

●Explosion at busy checkpoint in Mogadishu No group admits attack but mayor blames Al-Shabab

- Arab News Jeddah

At least 90 people were killed on Saturday when a bomb in a truck exploded at a checkpoint during the morning rush hour in Mogadishu, the capital of Somalia.

Many students, several police officers and at least two Turkish nationals were among the dead. A small team of Turkish engineers had been working near the site of the blast, building a road into the city.

No group admitted carrying out the bombing, but the city’s mayor Omar Mohamud blamed the militant Al-Shabab organizati­on, which is linked to Al-Qaeda.

Traffic is usually heavy at the Ex-Control Junction, where heavily armed security forces check vehicles for explosives and weapons. There is also a government tax collection point at the junction, where fees are taken from buses and trucks.

Sabdow Ali, 55, who lives near by, left his house when he heard the explosion, and counted at least 13 bodies. “Dozens of injured people were screaming for help but the police opened fire and I rushed back to my house,” he said.

The injured were transporte­d to Medina Hospital, where a nurse said they had admitted more than 100 people. At least 16 of those killed were students from Banadir University, who had been traveling on a minibus when the truck bomb exploded.

“What happened today was horrible,” said one student who feared his sister had been on the bus. She was later found safe.

“I was among several students who rushed to the hospital after we heard. I counted the bodies of 16 male and female students, some of them had parts of their bodies severed.

“The minibus carried 17 students and only one of them survived. He had left the bus before the blast to get a pass receipt from the tax collection point.”

Al-Shabab regularly carries out such attacks in an attempt to undermine the government, which is backed by the UN and African Union peacekeepi­ng troops. In October 2017, a truck bomb exploded next to a fuel tanker in Mogadishu, creating a fireball that killed nearly 600 people.

The group sometimes does not admit carrying out attacks when there is a large public backlash, such as the 2009 suicide bombing of a graduation ceremony for medical students.

Al-Shabab is the youth wing of the former Islamic Courts Union, and pledged loyalty to Al-Qaeda in 2012.

The African Union peacekeepi­ng force is scheduled to hand over responsibi­lity for security to Somali troops next year, although the date keeps changing.

“Somalia is not ready to take over control of security next year or the year after,” said Hussein Sheikh-Ali, founder of the Hiraal Institute, a security think tank in Mogadishu.

FASTFACT

Al-Shabab means The Youth in Arabic. It emerged as the radical wing of Somalia’s now-defunct Union of Islamic Courts, which controlled Mogadishu in 2006, before being forced out by Ethiopian forces.

 ?? AFP ?? Many students, several police officers and at least two Turkish nationals were among the dead in Saturday’s truck bomb blast in Mogadishu.
AFP Many students, several police officers and at least two Turkish nationals were among the dead in Saturday’s truck bomb blast in Mogadishu.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia