Militants fire guns and set off explosions during suspected Al-Shabaab assault on main court buildings in Mogadishu
Somalia supreme court attack – women walk past the site of the deadly blast in Mogadishu. Photograph: Omar Faruk/Reuters |
At least 20 people were killed in Mogadishu after
al-Shabaab extremists stormed the Somali capital's main court buildings, firing
guns and setting off explosions during clashes with security forces.
The assault was the most serious in the capital since the
Islamist group was forced out in 2011.
The attack on the supreme court triggered a gunfight with
police and armed forces. Two explosions were heard and gunmen, many wearing
explosives-laden vests, climbed on to the roof and fired shots.
A police officer, Hassan Abdulahi, said he saw five
bodies at the entrance to the court. All nine extremist were killed, he said,
adding that the militants had taken an unknown number of hostages, while other
government workers and civilians on the premises hid.
Soldiers carry a wounded
civilian from the court. Photograph: Farah Abdi Warsameh/AP
|
On Friday, the Foreign Office released a travel warning
for Somalia that warned of a high threat of terrorism. "We continue to
believe terrorists are in the final stages of planning attacks in
Mogadishu," it said.
On a Twitter feed believed to belong to the militants,
al-Shabaab appeared to take responsibilty for the attack. A post said five
militants from the "Martyrdom Brigade" took part in the
"daring" raid.
The Somali prime minister, Abdi Farah Shirdon, said the
"pointless and pathetic act" would have no effect on the country's
commitment to progress.
President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud said: "I want the
terrorist to know that our country, Somalia, is moving, and will keep moving
forward, and will not be prevented to achieve the ultimate noble goal, a
peaceful and stable Somalia, by a few desperate terrorists."
The court complex is a confusing maze of buildings and
rooms, allowing for plenty of places to hide but also for many places for
gunmen to take hostages. The armed men forced their way inside the complex and
immediately set off an explosion, said Yusuf Abdi, who was near the court when
the attack happened.
About two hours after the assault began, survivors of the
attack began coming out of the buildings. Some were crying and others held
their head in their hands.
"I never expected to make it out alive today,"
said Halima Geddi, who had taken cover behind a wall. "There is no peace.
No one protects us. I came to see my boy who was supposed to be tried
here."
Most militant attacks in Mogadishu are blamed on fighters
from Al-Shabaab, an al-Qaida-linked rebel group that ruled the city from 2006
until August 2011, when African Union and government forces pushed them out of
the city.
Since then extremists have launched suicide bombings on
the capital every few weeks. Despite those intermittent attacks, Mogadishu is
generally considered more peaceful than most of the previous seven years.
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