Somali forces fighting al-Shabab in the capital
Gunfire continued midday Friday in Somalia’s
capital as security forces fought with al-Shabab extremists holed up in a
building hours after a car bombing in Mogadishu left at least 18 dead, with the
toll expected to climb.
Police Capt. Mohamed Hussein told The Associated
Press that at least 40 others were injured in the complex attack that began
Thursday evening as many Somalis relaxed in the popular area of restaurants and
hotels.
Hussein said security forces were trying to
neutralize the extremists hiding in a building close to the Maka Almukarramah
hotel, which the Islamic extremist group al-Shabab, claiming responsibility,
said had been the target.
The hotel is patronized by government officials,
and the al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab has targeted it multiple times in attacks
that have killed scores of people.
Hussein said the death toll could rise. Many
victims had horrific injuries — some had lost limbs, nurse Sadiya Yusuf at Daru
Shifa hospital said — and hospitals were said to be struggling to cope with the
number of causalities.
The attack began when the car bomb went off near
the home of appeals court chief Judge Abshir Omar, and security forces fought
off gunmen who tried to force their way inside, Hussein said.
At least four gunmen then opened fire at nearby
buildings and businesses, sparking clashes with hotel guards, he said. Dozens
of cars caught fire along Maka Almukarramah Road.
The style of the attack echoed previous ones by
al-Shabab in Mogadishu as well as the attack in January at a luxury hotel
complex in the capital of neighboring Kenya that killed 21 people.
The United Nations mission in Somalia and others
in the international community quickly condemned the ongoing attack, one of the
worst in Mogadishu in months.
It came after the U.S. military carried out a
number of deadly airstrikes in recent days against al-Shabab, considered the
deadliest Islamic extremist group in Africa. Al-Shabab opposes Somalia’s
federal government and wants to impose sharia law.
The U.S. has dramatically increased such
airstrikes since President Donald Trump took office. The U.S. military command
for the African continent reported carrying out 50 strikes in Somalia in 2018.
This year, the airstrikes have come at an even
faster pace. The U.S. military command for Africa reported 23 as of Tuesday,
including one in central Somalia that killed 20 extremists and another a day
earlier that killed 35.