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A Somali woman reacts at the scene of the car bomb explosion
At least 90 people were killed when a bomb-laden truck
exploded at a busy checkpoint in the Somali capital Mogadishu on Saturday, an
international organisation working in the country said, in the deadliest attack
in more than two years.
The dead included many students and two Turkish nationals,
Somalia’s foreign minister said, adding that dozens were injured.
Saturday is a working day in the Muslim country and the
explosion occurred during the morning rush hour. Rescuers carried bodies past
the twisted wreckage of a vehicle and a minibus taxi smeared with blood.
A report by the international organisation, which did not
want to be named, said the death toll was more than 90 and that university
students and 17 police officers were among those killed. A Somali MP also
tweeted that he had been told the death toll stands at more than 90.
Like other checkpoints in a city scarred by decades of
conflict, traffic is often clogged at the Ex-Control Junction, where heavily
armed security forces check vehicles for explosives and weapons and other
officers direct traffic. There is also a government tax collection point at
junction, officials said.
No-one immediately claimed responsibility for the blast but
the city’s mayor blamed al Qaeda-linked Islamist group al Shabaab.
The group regularly carries out such attacks in an attempt
to undermine the government, which is backed by the United Nations and African
Union peacekeeping troops.
The most deadly attack blamed on al Shabaab was in October
2017 when a bomb-laden truck exploded next to a fuel tanker in Mogadishu,
creating a fireball that killed nearly 600 people.
While al Shabaab carries out frequent attacks, the death
tolls are often lower than in Saturday’s blast. The group has sometimes not
claimed responsibility for attacks that sparked a big public backlash, such as
a 2009 suicide bombing of a graduation ceremony for medical students.
A number of attacks this year, including one in September on
a base where U.S. special forces train Somali commandos, show the group maintains
a strong intelligence network and can mount deadly and sometimes sophisticated
operations, analysts say.
Three witnesses told Reuters that a small team of Turkish
engineers were present at the time of the blast, constructing a road into the
city.
Turkey’s foreign ministry confirmed the death of two of its
nationals.
Turkey has been a major donor to Somalia since a famine in
2011, and together with the government of Qatar is funding a number of
infrastructure and medical projects in the country. Turkey opened a military
base in Mogadishu in 2017 to train Somali soldiers.
‘SCREAMING FOR HELP’
After the explosion, 55-year-old Sabdow Ali, who lives
nearby, said he left his house and counted at least 13 people dead.
“Dozens of injured people were screaming for help but the
police immediately opened fire and I rushed back to my house,” he told Reuters.
The injured were transported to Medina Hospital, where a
Reuters witness saw dozens arriving by ambulance, and to other hospitals.
A nurse at Medina, speaking on condition of anonymity, said
the facility had received more than 100 wounded people. Weeping relatives
gathered outside the entrance as they sought information on their loved ones.
Speaking to reporters at the blast site, Mogadishu Mayor
Omar Muhamoud said students were killed as they commuted to their studies, many
of them to the capital’s Banadir University.
Somali Foreign Minister Ahmed Awad tweeted that many of the
dead were “students with ambition, and hardworking men and women.”
The mayor blamed al Shabaab for the attack, without giving
details.
Police officials were not immediately available for comment
on casualty numbers.
AL SHABAAB’S STAYING POWER
Somalia has been riven by conflict since 1991, when clan
warlords overthrew dictator Siad Barre and then turned on each other.
Al Shabaab grew out of a political movement that used
Islamic courts to try to impose order on the country. U.S.-backed Ethiopian
soldiers defeated the Islamic Courts Union in 2006, but the movement’s youth
wing split off and launched an insurgency. Al Shabaab pledged loyalty to al
Qaeda in 2012.
The AU peacekeeping force, in Somalia since 2007, has been
gradually withdrawing its forces over the past several years. Somali forces are
scheduled to assume responsibility for security next year, though the precise
date of the withdrawal has repeatedly shifted.
“Somalia is not ready to take over control of security next
year or the year after,” said Hussein Sheikh-Ali, a former national security
adviser and founder of the Hiraal Institute, a Mogadishu-based security
think-tank.
Saturday’s attack was the 20th vehicle-borne explosives
attack of 2019 and the year is ending with more deaths from such attacks than
2018, he said.
Al Shabaab has also carried out attacks in east African
countries such as Kenya and Uganda. It claimed responsibility for an attack in
January on an upscale hotel and office complex in the Kenyan capital that
killed 21 people. (Reuters)

















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