Seven killed in Mogadishu beach restaurant attack
Police say all attackers have been gunned down and restaurant is now under full command of Somali government soldiers
MOGADISHU:
Seven people were killed in an attack by Shabaab extremists on a beachfront restaurant in the Somali capital Mogadishu, a spokesperson for the city authorities said on Friday.
"Nine people including two Shabaab gunmen were killed in the attack" on Thursday, Mogadishu city spokesperson Abdifatah Halane told AFP.
Al Qaeda linked Shabaab militants attacked the Banadir Beach Restaurant close to the city's Lido Beach, setting off a car bomb before exchanging fire with security forces.
The restaurant is popular with young people and government officials. Around 20 people managed to escape from the restaurant during the gunfight. By Friday morning officials said the attackers had been killed.
Al Shabaab militants bomb Somali beach restaurant, gunfight ongoing
All the "attackers have been gunned down and the restaurant is now under the full command of the Somali government soldiers," regional police commander Colonel Abshir Bishaar told the Somali National News Agency.
"The terrorist attack killed nine persons, five of them were civilians, two security forces and the other two were the militants who carried out the attack," Bishaar said, adding that two other civilians were injured.
It is the second time this year the group has attacked the Lido beach area and its many eateries, including upmarket establishments popular with business people and diaspora Somalis who have returned home to the city.
In late January, Shabaab gunmen detonated a bomb before bursting into the Lido Sea Food Restaurant and spraying gunfire at terrified customers, killing 20 people. The group is expected to try and violently disrupt elections due to be held in September and October.
Despite abandoning the capital five years ago Shabaab still launches regular attacks against government, military, civilian and foreign targets.
The extremists have also staged repeated attacks in neighbouring Kenya and a recent security analysis warned the group was expanding its horizons with cells active in Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda as well as Somalia.
Seven people were killed in an attack by Shabaab extremists on a beachfront restaurant in the Somali capital Mogadishu, a spokesperson for the city authorities said on Friday.
"Nine people including two Shabaab gunmen were killed in the attack" on Thursday, Mogadishu city spokesperson Abdifatah Halane told AFP.
Al Qaeda linked Shabaab militants attacked the Banadir Beach Restaurant close to the city's Lido Beach, setting off a car bomb before exchanging fire with security forces.
The restaurant is popular with young people and government officials. Around 20 people managed to escape from the restaurant during the gunfight. By Friday morning officials said the attackers had been killed.
Al Shabaab militants bomb Somali beach restaurant, gunfight ongoing
All the "attackers have been gunned down and the restaurant is now under the full command of the Somali government soldiers," regional police commander Colonel Abshir Bishaar told the Somali National News Agency.
"The terrorist attack killed nine persons, five of them were civilians, two security forces and the other two were the militants who carried out the attack," Bishaar said, adding that two other civilians were injured.
It is the second time this year the group has attacked the Lido beach area and its many eateries, including upmarket establishments popular with business people and diaspora Somalis who have returned home to the city.
In late January, Shabaab gunmen detonated a bomb before bursting into the Lido Sea Food Restaurant and spraying gunfire at terrified customers, killing 20 people. The group is expected to try and violently disrupt elections due to be held in September and October.
Despite abandoning the capital five years ago Shabaab still launches regular attacks against government, military, civilian and foreign targets.
The extremists have also staged repeated attacks in neighbouring Kenya and a recent security analysis warned the group was expanding its horizons with cells active in Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda as well as Somalia.