Suicide Bomber Kills At Least 17 in Mogadishu Police Training Camp

The militant Islamist group ‘al Shabaab’ has claimed responsibility for the attack.

Reuters
World
Updated:
The suicide bomber blew himself up inside a police training camp in Mogadishu. 
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The suicide bomber blew himself up inside a police training camp in Mogadishu. 
(Photo: Reuters)

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A suicide bomber disguised as a policeman blew himself up inside a police training camp in Somalia's capital Mogadishu on Thursday and killed at least 17 officers, officials said.

Police spokesman Major Mohamed Hussein said the attacker had explosives strapped to his body and infiltrated the General Kahiye Police Training Academy during an early morning parade.

According to AP, the death toll has risen to 17, while the number of people injured from the blast has increased to 20. Earlier, the head of a local ambulance service said they had moved the bodies of 13 victims as well as 15 injured people.

The militant Islamist group al Shabaab claimed responsibility for the attack and gave a higher death toll.

We killed 27 police (officers) and injured more.
Abdiasis Abu Musab, the group’s military operations spokesman, to Reuters

The group, which is allied to al Qaeda, is waging an insurgency against the UN-backed government and its African Union allies in a bid to topple the weak administration and impose its own strict interpretation of Islam.

The militants were driven out of Mogadishu in 2011 and have since been steadily losing territory to the combined forces of African Union peacekeepers and Somali security forces.

Al Shabaab's attacks come at a time when the African Union is finalising plans to trim its peacekeeping mission called AMISOM.

The force of 22,000 deployed a decade ago is set to lose 1,000 soldiers this month as part of a long-term plan to pull out of the country and hand security to the Somali army.

The peacekeepers were deployed to help secure a government that has struggled to establish central control in a country that plunged into civil war in the early 1990s.

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Published: 14 Dec 2017,01:45 PM IST

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