ADVERTISEMENT

Extremists attack Somalia govt office, Minister among five dead

March 23, 2019 01:44 pm | Updated 09:26 pm IST - MOGADISHU

A Somali woman walks past a destroyed building after a suicide car bomb attack on the government building in the capital Mogadishu, Somalia on March 23, 2019.

Gunmen set off a suicide car bombing and then stormed a government building in Somalia’s capital on Saturday, killing at least five people including the country’s Deputy Labor Minister, police said. It was the latest attack by Islamic extremists in the troubled Horn of Africa nation.

After an hours-long gunbattle, Somalia’s security forces took back control of the building in Mogadishu on March 23 afternoon from at least five attackers who forced their way into the government building that houses the Ministries of Labour and Public Works, Police Capt. Mohamed Hussein told.

Saqar Ibrahim Abdalla, Somalia’s Deputy Minister of Labour and Social Affairs, was killed in his ground-floor office shortly after gunmen entered the building, he said.

ADVERTISEMENT

Dozens of people were inside the building at the time since Saturday is a working day in Somalia. The building is not far from the headquarters of the Somali intelligence agency.

As the attack unfolded, gunfire could be heard from inside the building. White smoke billowed from the scene, according to witnesses.

A similar attack targeting a busy area in Mogadishu at the end of February killed at least 24 people.

ADVERTISEMENT

Al-Shabab, Africa’s most active Islamic extremist group, has been fighting for years to take power and create an Islamic state in Somalia. It frequently carries out suicide bombings targeting public places, hotels and government offices despite being pushed out of Mogadishu. It mostly operates from rural areas in the country’s south.

African Union peacekeepers stationed in Mogadishu and elsewhere in the country have helped Somali forces to keep al-Shabab fighters at bay.

The extremist group has also carried out many deadly attacks in neighboring Kenya in retaliation over the country’s deployment in 2011 of peacekeepers in Somalia.

The U.S. military has carried out a number of deadly airstrikes in recent months against al-Shabab.

This is a Premium article available exclusively to our subscribers. To read 250+ such premium articles every month
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
The Hindu operates by its editorial values to provide you quality journalism.
This is your last free article.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT