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A suicide car bomb ripped through a police base in Mogadishu on February
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Mogadishu, Somalia
Mogadishu, Somalia

Somalia bomb truck kills more than 70

Published on : 4 October 2011 - 2:41pm | By RNW Africa Desk (Photo: AFP)
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US condemns Mogadishu bombing

The United States condemned the bombing by al-Qaeda-linked Somali rebels that killed more than 70 people in the Somalian capital Mogadishu on Tuesday, and said those responsible for the attack must be held accountable.

"This despicable and cowardly act took the lives of dozens of innocent civilians," the White House said. "Those who carried out these attacks have nothing to offer the people of Somalia except murder and destruction and they must be held accountable."

"The United States stands with the families and loved ones of those killed and injured, and with the Somali people, who have suffered for far too long." The US called for continued international support for the African Union mission and the Somalian Transitional Federal Government.
 

Somalia's al-Qaeda-linked rebels struck at the heart of the restive capital on Tuesday, killing more than 70 people with a truck bomb in the group's most deadly attack in the country since launching an insurgency in 2007.

Somali President Sheikh Sharif Ahmed denounced the blast, which caused the most casualties among young students waiting for exam results at the education ministry, as a "cruel and inhumane act of violence". Another 150 people were wounded.

The African Union force in Somalia (AMISOM) said a truck laden with drums of fuel rammed a checkpoint outside a compound housing government ministries in the K4 (Kilometre 4) area of Mogadishu, where students had gathered to register for scholarships offered by Turkey. Hundreds of parents stood weeping outside the Madina Hospital in Mogadishu after being denied access for security reasons and nurses said they were overwhelmed.

Al-Shabaab insurgents pulled most of their fighters out of Mogadishu in August allowing government troops and African Union soldiers to seize much of the capital. But the rebels vowed to still carry out attacks on government installations and military bases. "More serious blasts are coming," spokesman Sheikh Ali Mohamud Rage told reporters.

Ban Ki-moon “appalled”
The twisted axle from the exploded truck lay on blackened soil. A body draped with a red shawl lay nearby. People used corrugated iron, rugs and white sheeting to carry corpses away from the devastation at a normally bustling junction. Ambulances rushed to and fro past twisted, charred trees and a burnt out car. "I was among the first people to arrive here moments after the explosion. I looked around and reassured those who were still alive," said witness Halma Abdi.

Britain condemned the attack and France reasserted its support for the country's UN-backed transitional government. UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said he was appalled by the vicious attack. "It is very difficult to prevent these types of terrorist attacks which we have consistently warned are likely to be on the increase," the UN special envoy to Somalia, Augustine Mahiga, said. The government said no senior officials were hurt in the attack on the ministry buildings.

Burns and fractures
The blast flattened kiosks near the compound and a charred body lay near a blazing car. Debris from the explosion landed hundreds of metres away. Scores of people with burns walked to a nearby hospital and police were trying to evacuate more students trapped inside the damaged buildings. Doctors said they were shocked by the number of casualties, in a city that has endured years of violence.

The International Committee of the Red Cross said more than 90 people, including five women and nine children, had been admitted to the Madina Hospital, many with burns and fractures. Some analysts said they were worried the blast might prompt international agencies helping famine victims in Somalia to pull out, leaving operations in the hands of local organisations prone to corruption or theft by militias.
President: “We will hit back”

"Most humanitarian agencies were complaining about a lack of security and this might put off international agencies from going anywhere near Mogadishu now," said Hamza Mohamed, a London-based Somali analyst. "This is my worst fear now."

President Ahmed said al-Shabaab could not have "attacked the Somali people at a worst time", as the country struggles with the worst drought to hit the country in decades, but vowed to hit back at the rebels. "They cannot attack our resolve and will not turn us away from a future in our own safety and security, united in peace and prosperity," he said in a statement.

Threat to Somalia
When al Shabaab fighters pulled out of Mogadishu in August, analysts warned the conflict was far from won and a shift in the insurgents' tactics could herald a wave of al-Qaeda-style attacks. Others analysts said the attack was a stark reminder the group still poses a threat to Somalia, and other countries in the region. Al-Shabaab killed 79 people watching the soccer World Cup final in Uganda last year.

Analysts also said the blast underscored the government's failure to take advantage of the August withdrawal. "The fact al-Shabaab has reoccupied at least three of the districts it abandoned at the time and is apparently able to operate freely in others to the extent of pulling off the bombing is an indictment of the regime's failure to capitalise on the opportunity, which was handed to it on a silver platter," said J. Peter Pham, Africa director with US think-tank the Atlantic Council.

Harsh version of sharia
Al Shabaab has used suicide bombers to devastating effect in past attacks on African Union compounds, government buildings and a medical graduation ceremony. A suicide bomber killed three government ministers in the December 2009 attack on the graduation ceremony in Mogadishu and a fourth minister died from his wounds two months later. A female suicide bomber killed the interior minister in June.

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Al-Shabaab is fighting to oust the UN-backed transition government that it sees as a puppet of the West and wants to impose its own harsh version of sharia law throughout Somalia. The militants still hold sway over large chunks of southern and central Somalia, which is also in the grip of a famine. Al-Shabaab had appeared to be on the back foot and there were reports of internal rifts and funding problems.

However, al-Shabaab has renewed its attacks on government troops and militia near the Kenyan border in the past few weeks and the Kenyan government has also blamed the militants for the kidnapping of two Western tourists from its beach resorts.

The attack also comes at a time the government has just embarked on a 12-month political road map which is supposed to lead to elections for a new parliament and president by August 20 next year.

Source: Reuters

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