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Militants raid police HQ after Mogadishu blasts

July 07, 2018
An unidentified man walks from the scene of a suicide car bombing near Somalia's presidential palace in Mogadishu, Saturday. — Reuters
An unidentified man walks from the scene of a suicide car bombing near Somalia's presidential palace in Mogadishu, Saturday. — Reuters

MOGADISHU — Militants from Somalia's Al-Shabaab group stormed a government building housing the security and interior ministries on Saturday after twin bombings wounded at least 17 people nearby in central Mogadishu.

A Reuters witness saw a heavy exchange of gunfire outside the building, which is also used by police. Smoke drifted from burning vehicles following a suicide car bombing close to the presidential palace and a second blast near the security building.

A spokesman for the Al-Shabaab group said it had carried out both bombings and said its fighters remained inside the government security building.

"We stormed the building which houses the security ministry, interior ministry and police," Abdiasis Abu Musab, Al-Shabaab's military operations spokesman, told Reuters. "We're still inside the building."

Police official Major Mohamed Hussein said the second explosion took place when a vehicle carrying Al-Shabaab fighters to storm the building after the first explosion was detonated remotely.

"Al-Shabaab remotely exploded the second car after they got out of it," he said, adding that a heavy exchange of fire continued at the occupied building.

In the moments following the blasts ambulance sirens were heard while announcements were made via loudspeaker to help clear the roads.

At least 17 people were wounded in the two bombings, said Abdikadir Abdirahman, director of the Amin Ambulance emergency service.

Al-Shabaab wants to topple Somalia's Western-backed central government, expel the African Union-mandated peace keeping force AMISOM and establish a government based on its own strict interpretation of Islamic sharia law.

Somalia has been gripped by violence and lawlessness since the toppling of dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in the early 1990s. — Reuters


July 07, 2018
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