Suicide bomb kills at least 29 at Somalia’s main port

Attack was claimed by al Shabaab militants who say it was an effort to disrupt elections

A Somali soldier (L) and residents walk through the wreckage at the scene of car bomb attack near the Mogadishu port on Sunday. Photograph: Mohamed AbiWahab/Getty Images
A Somali soldier (L) and residents walk through the wreckage at the scene of car bomb attack near the Mogadishu port on Sunday. Photograph: Mohamed AbiWahab/Getty Images

A suicide truck bomb hit the entrance of Somalia’s biggest port on Sunday, killing at least 29 people, police said, an attack claimed by Islamist al Shabaab militants.

The fighters said they were trying to disrupt protracted parliamentary elections - part of efforts to rebuild the fractured nation after decades of war. The three-month vote is due to end on December 29th.

Gunfire rang out after the blast at Mogadishu Port, Mohamed Hussein, a worker there, told Reuters. Two others said work had been halted and staff sent home.

A Somali security officer(R) guards a suspected member of the al-Qaeda-linked Shabaab group detained at the scene of car bomb attack near the Mogadishu port on Sunday. Photograph: Mohamed AbiWahab/Getty Images
A Somali security officer(R) guards a suspected member of the al-Qaeda-linked Shabaab group detained at the scene of car bomb attack near the Mogadishu port on Sunday. Photograph: Mohamed AbiWahab/Getty Images
The scene of a car bomb attack near the port of the capital Mogadishu is pictured on Sunday. Photograph: Mohamed AbiWahab/Getty Images
The scene of a car bomb attack near the port of the capital Mogadishu is pictured on Sunday. Photograph: Mohamed AbiWahab/Getty Images

The bodies of victims lay strewn outside the capital’s terminal in a street filled with rubble from damaged tea shops.

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“At least 29 civilians died and 50 others have been injured in the blast. We believe it was a suicide truck bomb,” police officer Colonel Abdikadir Farah told Reuters.

Al Shabaab’s military operation spokesman, Sheikh Abdiasis Abu Musab, told Reuters the blast was aimed at police officers stationed close to the port.

“We killed 30 security forces and injured 50. We targeted them because they had been trained to provide security at so-called elections,’ he said.

Al Shabaab's insurgency aims to drive out African Union peacekeepers, topple Somalia's western-backed government and impose its strict version of Islam on the Horn of Africa state.

Around 14,000 people representing Somalia’s federal states have been chosen to pick the 275 lawmakers. Those members of parliament will choose a new president.

The government, UN officials and international donors have said security issues prevented a broader vote.

Al Shabaab accuses the presidential and parliamentary candidates of being foreign stooges.

Reuters