Somali president resolute after Shabab car bombing

Somalia’s president vowed Saturday he would not halt efforts to restore peace and security to the country in the wake of a car bomb attack in central Mogadishu by Al-Qaeda-linked Shabab rebels.

November 09, 2013
Somali president resolute after Shabab car bombing
Somali president resolute after Shabab car bombing







MOGADISHU — Somalia’s president vowed Saturday he would not halt efforts to restore peace and security to the country in the wake of a car bomb attack in central Mogadishu by Al-Qaeda-linked Shabab rebels.



The huge blast on Friday evening outside a top hotel in Somalia’s capital killed at least four people, including a government official, and wounded 15, according to the government.



“I strongly condemn this heinous act of terrorism outside the Maka al Mukurama Hotel by Shabab, which caused deaths and injuries to civilians,” Somalia’s internationally backed president, Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, said in a statement.



“The aim of the attack was to terrorize people in order to stop the huge progress towards peace and stability in Somalia.



“We say out loudly to Shabab that you will never stop us making huge progress towards peace and stability and good governance,” he added.



Officials said one of the country’s top diplomats — Abdulkadir Ali Dhuub, a former acting ambassador to London — was killed when the car bomb exploded outside the hotel, which is popular with officials and businessmen.



The statement from the presidency said another blast was averted, with a man carrying a “laptop and explosive items” apprehended while trying to set off a bomb inside the hotel at the same time as the car bomb.



Shabab militants have been pushed out of Mogadishu but still control large parts of the countryside and have continued to strike at the heart of the capital.

 

In September the group also claimed responsibility for a massacre at an upmarket shopping center in the Kenyan capital Nairobi that left at least 67 dead.



The latest attack comes as the African Union force in Somalia, AMISOM, is asking the UN Security Council to green-light a boost in its numbers as part of efforts to step up offensive operations against the Shabab.



It also comes after a US army drone strike on a Shabab convoy last month that officials said killed the rebels’ top suicide bomb-maker. — AFP


November 09, 2013
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