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Somali govt says rebels have more car bombs ready | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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MOGADISHU, (Reuters) – Somalia’s al Shabaab insurgents have six more stolen United Nations vehicles primed as suicide bombs, the government said on Friday.

President Sheikh Sharif Ahmed’s administration says it will not be bowed by twin suicide car bombs that hit the African Union’s (AU) main base in Mogadishu on Thursday, killing 17 AU peacekeepers, including the AMISOM force’s deputy commander. But the audacious attack by two U.N.-marked cars on the heart of the peacekeeping mission raises serious questions about the credibility of the deeply divided government, which controls little more than a few districts of the capital.

The state minister for defence, Sheikh Yusuf Mohamed Siad, a former warlord also known as “Inda’ade” or “white eyes”, said the insurgents had seized more U.N. vehicles in recent months.

“We were all aware of their suicidal preparations but we never thought they would penetrate the AMISOM compound,” he said. “We knew they were masterminding eight cars … they are left with six more cars. That is cowardice.”

Inda’ade said the bombings would not stop the government launching fresh attacks against al Shabaab, which Washington says is al Qaeda’s proxy in the failed Horn of Africa state.

“People will see what we’ll do to them. They are not Muslims … We know each other. Let’s wait and see what happens next.”

Al Shabaab gunmen, including foreign fighters, have attacked and looted U.N. compounds in Somalia in recent months.

Thursday’s attack was the worst on the 5,000-strong AU force of troops from Uganda and Burundi. The Ugandan force commander was also wounded in the explosions.

The blasts at the heavily guarded heart of the mission followed one of the capital’s most violent months in 20 years. Fighting in Somalia has killed more than 18,000 civilians since the start of 2007 and left 1.5 million more homeless.

Western security agencies say the lawless nation has become a safe haven for militants, including foreign jihadists, who are using it to plot attacks across the region and beyond.

Al Shabaab said the strike was in revenge for the killing in southern Somalia of one of the continent’s most wanted al Qaeda suspects in a helicopter raid on Monday by U.S. special forces.

Kenyan-born Salah Ali Saleh Nabhan was wanted for the 2002 bombing of an Israeli-owned Kenyan hotel that killed 15 people. But many Mogadishu residents denounced the rebels on Friday for retaliating with an attack that claimed only the lives of four Somali civilians and east African peacekeepers. At least 19 locals were also killed in shelling after the blasts.

“Bombing Somali Muslims because of a dead foreign terrorist is totally ungodly and inhumane,” businesswoman Asha Farah told Reuters. “I can only say that al Shabaab are mad.”

The U.S. raid that killed Nabhan likely won Washington valuable intelligence, but risked further inflaming anti-U.S. opinion in a country of growing concern to the West.

Peter Pham, a U.S.-based analyst, said the Somali government (TFG) was in severe difficulties, but warned that it would be a mistake of “startling proportions” if Washington sent more weapons to help it battle the rebels.

“The TFG is both so corrupt and so lacking in capacity that sending it materiel has only made it more convenient for the insurgents fighting it — who are well-financed thanks to their foreign donors, both state and non-state — to simply replenish their arsenals on the open market,” Pham wrote.

Somalis say Ahmed’s administration is torn by rivalries between his allies and those of former president Abdullahi Yusuf, and the security forces have not been paid in six months. “The government cannot overpower the opposition even if more African forces are deployed,” said Abdiqadir Odweyne, a senior policeman. “There are many shadows, suspicions and grudges.”