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[dehai-news] (Reuters): Two days into job, Somali president survives attacks

From: Berhane Habtemariam <Berhane.Habtemariam_at_gmx.de_at_dehai.org>
Date: Thu, 13 Sep 2012 01:33:51 +0200

Two days into job, Somali president survives attacks


Wed Sep 12, 2012 6:10pm GMT

* Suicide bomb attack kills at least eight people

* President Mohamud was holding news conference at time

* Islamist rebels promise to keep fighting

By Yara Bayoumy

MOGADISHU, Sept 12 (Reuters) - Islamist suicide bombers attacked the hotel
where Somalia's president was giving a news conference on Wednesday, killing
eight people and sending reporters diving for cover.

President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud - just two days into his job - and the
visiting Kenyan foreign minister were unhurt in the attack claimed by
Somalia's al Shabaab rebels.

The first explosion struck shortly after 2 p.m. (1100 GMT) as Kenya's Sam
Ongeri started to speak. Volleys of gunshots erupted as local and foreign
journalists ducked behind pillars, velvet red chairs and cameras.

Mohamud, who had been staying at the hotel since being elected on Monday,
was unfazed and Ongeri continued his speech, saying: "I believe this is the
price of peace."

Seven-and-a-half minutes later, a second explosion erupted.

The attacks - on the newly built Jazeera Palace hotel, near the airport and
one of the securest places in Mogadishu - underscore the security challenges
facing Mohamud, whose election was hailed by many as a way to end 20 years
of violent anarchy.

"We were behind the Mogadishu hotel blasts. It was a well planned Mujahideen
operation," Sheikh Abdiasis Abu Musab, a spokesman for al Shabaab's military
operations, told Reuters.

A journalist accompanying Ongeri said she had seen "pieces of meat flying
all over the place" after the first blast.

"Then I saw a second guy shooting as he stormed towards the hotel," said
Jamila Mohammed, who was outside the hotel when the assailants struck.

"PRIORITY 1, 2, 3: SECURITY"

A Reuters witness said the severed leg of one of the suicide bombers wearing
a white sneaker could be seen just outside the hotel's gate where African
Union armoured vehicles were parked, at least one of which was splattered
with blood.

A severed head lay in a large crater in the road dozens of metres (yards)
away from the hotel, which overlooks the Indian Ocean.

Mohamud's election by Somali lawmakers on Monday was hailed by his
supporters as a vote for change in the war-ridden Horn of Africa country
that has lacked effective central government since 1991.

Although he is relatively new to politics, the former academic faces old
problems: a stubborn Islamist insurgency, acrimonious clan politics, rampant
corruption and maritime piracy.

"First and foremost we will address the security issue here in Somalia ...
Our priority number one, our priority number two and priority number three
is security," Mohamud said moments after the blasts to cheers in the
audience.

The A.U. Peacekeeping force AMISOM said a third attacker was shot dead as he
attempted to scale the hotel's courtyard.

His body was lying in a pool of blood where three A.U vehicles were parked
just outside the hotel.

"Shabaab are very well-organised. Look at their timing. These people, they
are everywhere," said Mohamed Maie, a foreign ministry official, sitting in
the lobby after the attack.

"When the hope and aspirations came, that's the time they wanted to destroy
hope. You don't relax just because some people voted for a positive sign, it
doesn't mean everything is honey."

SHABAAB TO CONTINUE JIHAD

Al Shabaab - al Qaeda-linked militants - said the explosions had killed four
members of the security forces. A Somali ambulance service worker said they
had picked up the bodies of five government soldiers and two civilians.

"I could also see three dead African Union soldiers," the ambulance worker
said. AMISOM said one soldier died and three were others wounded.

The airport compound is a major base for African Union peacekeepers and the
surrounding area is considered one of the safest parts of the city.

On Tuesday, al Shabaab branded Mohamud a "traitor" and vowed to continue its
jihad against a government it says serves only Western interests.

Kenya sent troops into Somalia in November to help crush the Islamist
insurgency. Ongeri said Somalia could count on Kenya's support.

"The bomb blasts will change nothing at all. We are determined. We are there
for the course and until that course has been achieved," Bogita Ongeri, a
spokesman for Kenya Defence Forces, told Reuters.

C Thomson Reuters 2012 All rights reserved

 
Received on Wed Sep 12 2012 - 23:57:27 EDT
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