The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Gunmen killed after Mogadishu attack

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MOGADISHU: Somalia said yesterday its security forces killed two gunmen and captured three after coordinate­d car bomb blasts left at least 14 people dead, just two weeks after the country’s worst ever attack.

Several people were rescued from Shabaab gunmen holed up in a Mogadishu hotel, following a battle with the Al-Qaeda-affiliated militants who claimed the attack, security ministry spokesman Abdiasiz Ali Ibrahim said.

The attack on Saturday began when a car bomb exploded outside the Nasa Hablod Hotel 2 entrance, followed by a minibus loaded with explosives going off at a nearby intersecti­on.

“Five gunmen stormed the building, two of them were killed and the rest captured alive. The security forces are still working on retrieving the casualties, we don’t have exact number of the casualties so far,” the spokesman told reporters.

Another security official Mohamed Moalim Adan had put the death toll at 14, ‘most of them civilians’, as the operation was still ongoing Saturday night.

One senior police official and a former MP were among the dead.

The Shabaab claimed the bombing and hotel assault in a statement on its Andalus radio

Bangladesh arrests three Islamist militants Five gunmen stormed the building, two of them were killed and the rest captured alive.The security forces are still working on retrieving the casualties, we don’t have exact number of the casualties so far. Abdiasiz Ali Ibrahim, security ministry spokesman

DHAKA: Bangladesh police yesterday arrested three suspected Islamist extremists and seized weapons and explosives in a raid targeting a homegrown group accused of orchestrat­ing a string of deadly attacks.

The trio were detained in a predawn raid at a mango plantation in the northweste­rn district of Chapai Nawabganj.

Commander Abdullah al Murad, from the Rapid Action Battalion, said the men were from the Jamayetul Mujahideen Bangladesh, a group blamed for a cafe siege in Dhaka last year that left 22 people dead, including 18 foreigners.

“We had informatio­n that around 14 to 15 JMB men were having a secret meeting deep inside the plantation. We conducted a raid early in the morning and managed to round up three of them,” he told AFP, adding the men would be charged with terrorism offences.

“We have recovered a semiautoma­tic pistol, bullets, over a kilo of explosive powder and jihadi books in their possession.”

Since the cafe attack in July 2016, Bangladesh has killed nearly 70 accused militants in raids and shootouts aimed at decapitati­ng the JMB and its leadership.

But the group remains active, with police warning of new cells and plots for attacks in Bangladesh, a Muslim-majority nation of 160 million.

The JMB rose to notoriety in the early 2000s with a string of bomb attacks. Five senior figures were executed on charges of murder, genocide, torture and rape related to those attacks.

In recent years Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s secular government has blamed the JMB for a series of attacks on foreigners, atheist bloggers, rights activists and religious minorities. —AFP station.

“The Mujahedeen fighters are inside Nasa Hablod 2 hotel where ... apostate officials are staying,” said the brief statement.

The hotel is popular among government officials, several of whom were rescued by the security forces.

After the explosions witnesses reported shooting from inside the hotel.

“I was very lucky,” said Mohamed Dek, who escaped the hotel after the initial explosion.

Somalia’s President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed condemned the attack which comes two weeks after a massive truck bomb killed at least 358 people in the capital, the worst attack in the troubled country’s history.

To date, no group has claimed responsibi­lity for the October 14 attack, though Shabaab militants have been widely blamed for it.

“The violent terrorists carried out this attack to scare our people who are united to support security after the disaster on Oct 14. Such atrocities will neither deter nor discourage our will to fight the terrorists,” the president said in a statement.

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.

The Shabaab has made attacks on hotels — commonly beginning with a suicide car bombing followed by an invasion by gunmen — a regular strategy in its decade old battle to overthrow successive internatio­nally-backed government­s in Mogadishu.

The Shabaab lost their foothold in Mogadishu in 2011 but have continued their fight, launching regular attacks on military, government and civilian targets in the capital and elsewhere. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Residents walk at the scene of a blast in front of the hotel. — AFP photo
Residents walk at the scene of a blast in front of the hotel. — AFP photo

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