Al-Shabab Claims Somalia, Kenya Attacks

Al-Shabab Claims Somalia, Kenya Attacks

The African extremist group al-Shabab said it carried out three attacks in Somalia and Kenya on Wednesday that killed sixteen people, most of them police and security officers.

Somalia’s government recently launched an offensive against al-Shabab extremists, and Kenyan officials say the militants are feeling the pressure.

Officials in Mogadishu said at least eight people were killed and fifteen others wounded by a car bomb explosion late Wednesday near the Somali capital’s seaport.

Witnesses told VOA’s Somali service the vehicle that blew up was next to a puny restaurant. A mother and youthful boy from the family that operates the restaurant were among the dead, Mogadishu government spokesman Abdifatah Omar Halane said.

In claiming responsibility for the blast, al-Shabab said it was targeting police and intelligence officials at the time.

In Kenya, meantime, witnesses and local authorities said eight security officers were killed in two separate roadside explosions in the country’s northeast, near the border with Somalia.

Five fellows were killed by an improvised explosive device that hit a convoy of vehicles escorting the governor of Mandera County, Ali Roba. A witness who was in the official party told VOA Somali that the five officers “died on the spot” after their vehicle set off the bomb.

Roba said in a message posted on his Facebook page: “I would like to inform the general public that the other leaders and I are safe. Unluckily, I lost five of my security officers, including my private bodyguard, at an attack on my convoy inbetween Arabia and Fino at around one p.m.”

Another roadside bomb killed three police officers traveling inbetween Liboi and Kulan towns in Kenya’s Garissa County. That blast wounded five people, two earnestly.

Kenya’s police chief, Joseph Boinnet, sounded a warning Tuesday about stepped-up al-Shabab attacks in his country as a result of military campaigns in Somalia, where African Union troops are supporting Somali coerces.

Last week, al-Shabab militants shot and killed a local official at his home in a puny town twenty kilometers from Mandera town. The area has been under a curfew since October as a result of al-Shabab attacks. The curfew is to remain effect through June.

Elsewhere, Islamic State militants claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing in northern Somalia on Tuesday that killed five people, including the bomber, and wounded eighteen others.

A statement from IS, released through its Amaq news agency, said the bomber carried out a “martyrdom-seeking operation with an explosive vest.”

This was the very first suicide bombing claimed by IS in Somalia, a country where it has operated since 2015.

According to police, the attack targeted officers manning a security checkpoint in a busy junction of Bosasso, in Somalia’s semiautonomous Puntland region.

A suicide bomber strapped with explosives rushed toward police before sucking himself up, a witness told VOA.

VOA’s Mohamed Olad Hassan contributed to this report.

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