Troops retake stormed Somali presidential palace

In this July 5, 2014, file photo, the remains of a car bomb burn after it exploded outside the Somali parliament building in Mogadishu. Al-Qaeda-linked Shabab rebels on Tuesday attacked the presidential palace and were evicted by government troops later in the day.

In this July 5, 2014, file photo, the remains of a car bomb burn after it exploded outside the Somali parliament building in Mogadishu. Al-Qaeda-linked Shabab rebels on Tuesday attacked the presidential palace and were evicted by government troops later in the day.

MOGADISHU, Somalia: Somali troops retook the presidential palace in the capital of Mogadishu after militants forced their way in and exchanged heavy gunfire with troops and guards Tuesday, the latest attack underscoring the threat posed by the extremist group Al-Shabab in east Africa.

Smoke billowed from inside the heavily-fortified presidential compound, and loud explosions and gunfire could be heard as troops tried to repel the intruders. After more than two hours of fighting, Somalia’s presidency said in a Twitter update that “the shameful attack” had been foiled by Somalia’s armed forces fighting alongside African Union peacekeepers.

Al-Shabab claimed responsibility for the attack.

Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud was not inside the palace at the time of the attack, but the prime minister and the speaker of parliament were, said Capt. Mohamed Hussein, a senior police official.

The presidency said both President Mohamud and Prime Minister Abdiweli Sheikh Ahmed were safe.
The presidential compound, which also houses several government offices, has been the subject of many attacks by Al-Qaeda-linked militants over the years. It is considered one of the safest places in Mogadishu because of the tight security presence.

The presidency said that the compound has since been secured, but gave no details about any casualties or what happened to the militants. Hussein, the police official, said he counted at least nine bodies.

Some of the militants involved in the attack were dressed as government troops, confusing guards who let them in, said Yusuf Nor, a Somali military official at the scene of the attack. Amid the confusion, he said, some soldiers fired at their comrades.

The attack was the second assault on the presidential palace this year, and it marked the first time militants have been able to breach the compound and take offensive positions inside. The palace is protected by government troops and African Union peacekeepers who helped to drive the Al-Shabab militants out of their bases in Mogadishu in 2011.

Tuesday’s attack started when a car bomb exploded outside the presidential compound. Gunmen then entered the palace, police officer Mohamed Abdi told The Associated Press.

Police said the militants, who were armed with grenades, split up into groups once inside and tried to take control of different buildings in the compound.

Al-Shabab, which has links with Al-Qaeda, has vowed to step up attacks during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

Al-Shabab militants have previously carried out deadly attacks against lawmakers, UN staff and government officials. Last year the group attacked an upscale mall in Nairobi, the capital of neighboring Kenya, which has sent troops to fight the militants under the African Union banner.

Al-Shabab militants killed four people Saturday when a car laden with explosives blew up near the parliamentary building in Mogadishu.

Somali Defense Minister Mohamed Sheikh Mohamud told a local radio station in the aftermath of the latest attack that the Horn of Africa nation faces a “complicated” fight against Al-Shabab, and urged the public to cooperate with the authorities to defeat the militants.

Somalia has been trying to rebuild following years of political instability and civil strife since 1991, when the dictator Siad Barre was ousted from power.

Mohamud’s Western-backed government has promised to put the country on a path toward democracy and economic progress, despite regular attacks by Islamic militants.

 

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