A car bomb exploded near a police station in a busy
market in the Somali capital on Saturday, killing at least 11 people and
injuring 16 others, a police official said. The attack targeted a police
station in Mogadishu's Waberi neighborhood while President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud
had been visiting a university, said Capt. Mohamed Hussein.
He said the death toll was likely to rise, citing
the horrific injuries suffered by the victims. There was no immediate claim of
responsibility for the attack, but the al-Qaida-linked Islamic extremist group
al-Shabab often carries out such attacks.
Al-Shabab, which seeks to establish an Islamic
emirate ruled by a strict version of Shariah law, has waged an insurgency
against Somalia's weak U.N.-backed government. More than 22,000 peacekeepers
are deployed in Somalia in the multi-national African Union force. Al-Shabab
opposes the presence of foreign troops. Despite being ousted from most of its
key strongholds in south and central Somalia, the group continues to launch
deadly guerrilla attacks against the Somali government and African Union forces
across large parts of the horn of Africa nation.
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