Army chief Of Somalia Survives Suicide Bombing In Mogadishu

Army chief  Of Somalia Survives Suicide Bombing In Mogadishu
The armed group al-Shabab claimed responsibility for Monday's 'martyrdom operation'

 

 

The head of Somalia's military escaped unhurt and one civilian was killed on Monday when a suicide attacker drove a bomb laden car into a convoy in the capital Mogadishu. The al Qaeda linked al Shabab group said it

 

was behind the attack. General Yusuf Rage was in the convoy near a military hospital in Mogadishu's Hodan district when the blast struck, Colonel Abdiqani Ali, a military spokesman, said. "The commander's guards

 

 

opened fire on the suicide car bomb as it speedily tried to swerve into the convoy. The bomber was shot dead and his car bomb exploded. Commander and his guards escaped unhurt," he said. Mogadishu's Aamin

 

 

Ambulance service said it collected the body of one civilian. Half a dozen others were wounded but it was unclear how severely. General Rage was appointed last August at the age of 32, making him the youngest army chief in Somalia's history. Al Shabab's military

 

 

operations spokesman Abu Musab said in a statement: "We conducted a martyrdom operation in Mogadishu. The target was a military convoy escorting senior apostate commanders." Since 2008, the armed group has been fighting to overthrow the central government and establish its rule based on

 

 

its own harsh interpretation of Islamic law. Al Shabab was driven out of Mogadishu by government forces backed by 20,000 African Union peacekeepers in 2011. But the group still controls swaths of territory outside the cities and carries out numerous attacks, particularly suicide bombings, against government and international targets.