A car bomb near a hotel on a busy street in the Somali capital killed at least 13 people yesterday, police and the emergency medical services said, hours after a man was killed by a blast as he tried to ram through a checkpoint.
Police said the blast damaged a house on Maka Al Mukaram street but did not destroy its target, the Wehliye Hotel.
“We have carried 13 dead people and 14 others are injured. The death toll may rise further,” Abdikadir Abdirahman, director of aid-funded Aamin Ambulance services, told Reuters.
A spokesman for Somali insurgent group Al Shebaab claimed the attack.
“We were behind the Maka Al Mukaram street blast. We killed 17 people, including senior officials of military and security and former lawmakers,” Sheikh Abdiasis Abu Musab, Al Shebaab’s military operation spokesman, told Reuters by phone.
Earlier in the day, police shot at a minibus, also in Mogadishu, when the driver refused to stop as it approached a checkpoint.
The minibus exploded, wounding two bystanders and killing the driver, police officer Nur Osman told Reuters.
“A policeman at a checkpoint shot at the speeding minibus. It exploded and killed the Al Shebaab fighter that drove it,” he said.
In recent years, Al Qaeda-linked Al Shebaab has lost most of its territory to African Union peacekeepers supporting the UN-backed Somali government.
But the insurgents frequently launch deadly gun, grenade and bomb attacks in Mogadishu and other regions controlled by the federal government.
Many attacks are aimed at military bases but some also target civilians. “There is a trend of increasingly targeting hotels since 2015,” said Greg Robin, an IED expert at Nairobi-based think-tank Sahan Research.
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