Somalia blast kills ‘fighters’ from India, Pak

August 23, 2010 10:09 am | Updated November 28, 2021 09:28 pm IST - MOGADISHU

An explosion at a house used by insurgents in the Somali capital killed at least 10 al-Shabab militants, including two Indians and three Pakistani fighters, the Somali Information Ministry has said.

The statement said on Saturday that the overnight blast, in a southern Mogadishu neighbourhood, may have been caused by a premature car bomb explosion. Three Pakistanis, two Indians, an Afghan and an Algerian were among the dead, it said.

The government cited “security sources” as the basis for its information.

Apart from the government statement there was no other verification of the casualties or circumstances.

Al-Shabab is Somalia’s most dangerous militant group, and officials say foreign fighters with experience in Afghanistan and Iraq conflicts help train its troops.

“We heard explosions within minutes of each other ... but in the morning when we woke up no one could figure out the details because the whole neighbourhood was cordoned off by dozens of heavily armed al-Shabab militants,” Abdulahi Ibrahim, a Mogadishu resident, said of the latest explosion.

A second resident, Osman Jibril, said he could see militants searching through the rubble of a levelled building.

Al-Shabab did not release any statements on Saturday and calls to members of its group went unanswered.

“This is clear evidence that al-Shabab is planning death and destruction during the holy month of Ramadan. Terrorising people has nothing to do with our peaceful Islam,” said Interior Minister Abdulkadir Ali Omar.

Somalia has not had a functioning government since 1991, when warlords overthrew the president. Al-Shabab is the country’s most powerful militia. Last month it carried out its first overseas attack, twin bombings in Uganda during the World Cup final that killed 76 people watching the game on TV.

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