The Jerusalem Post

Eight killed as suicide bomber hits convoy of Qatari officials in Somalia

- • By ABDI SHEIKH and FEISAL OMAR

MOGADISHU (Reuters) – A suicide bomber rammed an explosive-laden car into a convoy carrying Qatari officials through the center of Somalia’s capital Mogadishu on Sunday, killing at least eight Somalis.

The visiting delegation of Qataris, who were traveling in the Somali Interior Minister’s bullet-proof vehicle, were “safe,” a security officer told Reuters, without going into further detail. The minister was not in the car at the time.

The Islamist rebel group al-Shabaab said it was behind the attack and threatened further strikes against Somalia’s government, which it called a “puppet” of Western powers.

“More explosions are on the way,” al-Shabaab’s military spokesman Sheikh Abdiasis Abu Musab told Reuters by telephone.

The al-Qaida-linked rebels, who want to impose their version of Islamic law or Shari’a on the country, have kept up a campaign of guerrillas­tyle attacks since African peacekeepe­rs pushed them out of bases in the city and other major towns.

Western powers, long worried Somalia is a launch pad for militant Islam in east Africa and beyond, fear it could slide back into chaos if security forces cannot cement security gains.

The blast tore through the busy Kilometer 4 road junction in the center of Mogadishu’s commercial and administra­tive district, hurling metal debris over a wide area. Nearby buildings were blackened and power cables hung loose from poles.

It was not clear in the confusion that followed the blast how many people had been killed. A coordinato­r for Mogadishu’s emergency services said ambulances had carried away the 15 bodies.

Earlier, the chairman of the city’s Hodan district, where the attack took place, told reporters at the blast site eight people had died.

“A silver 4x4 sped around the roundabout blaring its horn as it chased the convoy,” college student Abdullahi Ismail told Reuters at the scene, nursing a gash in his forehead. “It hit the last car in the convoy.”

Qatar has been forging closer political ties with Somalia in recent years as it seeks to expand its influence in the Horn of Africa region.

Sunday’s bomb was a stark reminder of two decades of civil strife in a country where the central government depends heavily on a near 18,000-strong African peacekeepi­ng force for its survival.

While there has been a significan­t improvemen­t in the coastal capital since African Union troops drove the Islamist al-Shabaab group out of the city in 2011, the attack showed the relative ease with which the combatants can still strike.

Parts of Mogadishu were in lock-down last week after security officials received a tip-off about an imminent attack, but security was relaxed on Saturday.

The Kilometer 4 intersecti­on connects the city’s fortified airport, where the United Kingdom opened an embassy on April 25, with the presidenti­al palace, parliament and other ministries.

The state of Somalia’s security forces will top the agenda at conference in London on May 7. Britain and Somalia are hoping to use the event to drum up more internatio­nal support at a time when al-Shabaab are weakened as a fighting force but can still inflict devastatin­g strikes.

Civil war after the fall of dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991 left Somalia without effective central government and awash with weapons. The turmoil opened the doors for piracy to flourish in the Gulf of Aden and deeper into the Indian Ocean.

 ?? (Feisal Omar/Reuters) ?? SOMALI SOLDIERS and security men stand by the remains of a wrecked vehicle at the scene of yesterday’s suicide car bombing south of Mogadishu.
(Feisal Omar/Reuters) SOMALI SOLDIERS and security men stand by the remains of a wrecked vehicle at the scene of yesterday’s suicide car bombing south of Mogadishu.

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