Mogadishu hotel attack kills 30

Heavy gunfire rang out across central Mogadishu on
Friday as Somali special forces battled to dislodge insurgents holed up next to
a hotel they bombed the previous evening, and as the death toll stemming from
that attack neared 30.
Al Shabaab militants set off a bomb outside the
Hotel Maka Al Mukarama on Thursday night before retreating to an adjacent
building, from where they fired on soldiers who tried to enter. Another bomb
exploded later about1km away.
Rescuers said the number of dead from the first
explosion, which destroyed several buildings, could well rise.
The attack, on a hotel popular with government
officials, is part of a pattern of Al Shabaab assaults on high-profile targets
in East Africa.
It comes days after US forces in Somalia stepped
up air strikes against the group, which is fighting to dislodge a
Western-backed government protected by peacekeepers.
“The militants are still fighting from inside a
civilian house adjacent to the hotel,” police officer Major Musa Ali told
Reuters on Friday morning.” (They) are fighting back with grenades and
Kalashnikov (rifles).”
He said 29 people, mostly civilians, had died in
the attack and its aftermath, and 80 had been wounded.
Authorities deployed a contingent of US-trained
Somali troops known as the Alpha Group to try to flush out the militants on
Friday, just after two wounded soldiers were carried away from the hotel.
The hotel attack, unusually for Somalia, began at
night, and rescuers had no lights or equipment to help dig the wounded out from
the rubble, said Abdikadir Adem, the director of the privately-run Aamin ambulance
service.
“The scene is fearful in magnitude it is similar
to the October 14 bombing,” he said, referring to a truck bomb that killed more
than 500 people in the city in 2017.
“The death toll may rise and rise.”
Al Shabaab’s military spokesman said on Friday it
was still in control of the Mogadishu hotel, located on a street lined with
hotels, shops and restaurants.
“The government tried three times to enter the
building but we repulsed them,” said Abdiasis Abu Musab.
With most roads in the city were shut to traffic,
including those leading to hospitals, soldiers at checkpoints near the blast
site repeatedly fired into the air to control crowds of frantic residents.
Many locals ran around screaming the names of
loved ones, having been searching for missing relatives since Thursday.
“I have been running to and fro from the blast
scene to hospitals since yesterday evening in search of my husband and brother.
I have just seen them in hospital. They are in a critical condition,”
mother-of-three Halima Omar said.
Somalia has been convulsed by lawlessness and
violence since 1991, and a further layer of chaos was added in 2015 with the
formation in the north of a splinter group of former al Shaabab insurgents who
pledged allegiance to Daesh.
At least 25 people have been killed this week in
clashes between the two militant groups, a military official from the
semi-autonomous region of Puntland said.
Al Shabaab has also carried out attacks in
neighbouring countries contributing to the African Union peacekeeper force
inside Somalia, including one on a hotel and office complex in Kenya in January
that killed 21 people.
Under President Donald Trump, Washington has
stepped up attacks against the group, and US Africa Command announced six air
strikes it says have killed 52 militants since Feb.23.