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Somalia Suicide Bombing Kills 20, Security Minister
Thursday, June 18, 2009
MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) -
A suicide bombing in western Somalia killed at least 20 people
Thursday including the national security minister. The Somali president
blamed al-Qaida while an extremist group with alleged links to the
terror network claimed responsibility.
Witness Mohamed Nur said a
small car headed toward the gate of the Medina Hotel in Belet Weyne,
then drove into vehicles leaving the hotel and exploded.
Information Minister Farhan Ali Mohamud announced the death of National
Security Minister Omar Hashi Aden but declined to give any other
details.
Somalia's president accused al-Qaida of being behind the
bombing but did not offer any evidence. He said the attack also killed a
senior Somali diplomat.
"It was an act of terrorism and it is
part of the terrorist attack on our people," Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed
told journalists in the capital. "Al-Qaida is attacking us."
Al-Shabab
spokesman Ali Mohamud Rage told local radio stations by phone that his
group carried out the attack and that one of their fighters died.
"We killed the national security minister and the former ambassador
to Ethiopia," said Rage, speaking from an undisclosed location.
The president said the national security minister was on official
business in Belet Weyne but did not elaborate. In recent weeks Aden had
frequently gone to Belet Weyne, which is considered a strategic town
because it is close to the Ethiopian border and is on a road that goes
directly to Mogadishu.
Aden, a former police officer, had risen
to the rank of colonel during dictator Mohamed Siad Barre's regime, the
last effective central government in Somalia before the country
descended into chaos. Aden later became a player in Somali politics and
more recently had become an ally of President Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed.
Diplomats have said that up to 400 foreign militants backed local
insurgents in a surge of violence in Mogadishu in mid-May. That fighting
claimed the lives of almost 200 civilians. The U.N. says the conflict
has displaced more than 122,000 people.
Somalia has not had an
effective government for 18 years after warlords overthrew Barre and
plunged the country into anarchy and chaos. The lawlessness has also
allowed piracy to thrive off the country's coast, making Somalia the
world's worst piracy hotspot.
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