Five people were killed and 13 wounded on Monday when a car bomb exploded near a heavily-guarded complex housing the offices of Somalia's president and its prime minister in Mogadishu, a security official said. There were no immediate reports of anyone attempting to enter the complex, and there was no claim of responsibility.
The al Qaeda-affiliated Shebab have often used cars driven by suicide bombers as a way of breaking into a location, with more attackers following on foot. "Five civilians died in the explosion and 13 others (were) wounded," said Somali security official Ahmed Dahir. "It was a car bomb but their target is not clear." He said it exploded near the checkpoint at the entrance to Villa Somalia.
"The explosion occurred between the main entrance of (Villa Somalia) and a nearby hotel," said a witness called Ali Ahmed. "I saw clouds of smoke up in the sky, it was very heavy." Expelled from Mogadishu in mid-2011, the Shebab still hold large swathes of the countryside which they use as launching pads for their attacks. They are fighting to overthrow the internationally-backed government in Mogadishu, which is protected by 22,000 African Union AMISOM troops from Burundi, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya and Uganda.
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