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Car bomb kills nine, injures 20 who were watching Euro 2024 final in Somalia restaurant
A group of people look at the debris and destruction at a cafe in Mogadishu on July 15, 2024 following a car bomb blast where five people were killed where football fans were watching the Euro 2024 final. — AFP pic

MOGADISHU, July 15 — The death toll from a blast at a cafe in Somalia’s capital Mogadishu has climbed to nine, security sources told AFP Monday, after a car bomb struck the venue packed with football fans watching the Euro 2024 final.

"Nine civilians were killed and 20 others wounded in the explosion,” Mohamed Yusuf, an official from the national security agency said, raising the official toll of five given by the authorities late Sunday.

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"There were many people inside the restaurant, most of them youth who were watching the football match... but thanks to God, most of them made their way out safely after using ladders to climb up and jump over the backside perimeter wall,” he said.

Images posted online showed a huge fireball and plumes of smoke billowing into the night sky as the explosion ripped through the popular restaurant in the centre of the city on Sunday.

Police officer Mohamed Salad rushed to the scene a few minutes after the blast and told AFP that several bodies were discovered under the debris.

"Five people died outside the building and on the main road including drivers of vehicles that were passing by the area”, he said.

"Four people died inside the restaurant, some of them removed from under the debris,” he added.

No group claimed responsibility for the bombing, but the state-run Somali National News Agency said Sunday that the attack was carried out by Al-Qaeda linked Al-Shabaab jihadists.

Al-Shabaab has been waging a bloody insurgency against Somalia’s fragile federal government for more than 17 years and has carried out numerous bombings in Mogadishu and elsewhere in the country.

Witnesses described scenes of panic and chaos after the blast, with people scrambling for safety and the main entrance to the cafe destroyed by the blaze.

"I was inside the restaurant watching the football match when I heard a huge explosion, there was smoke, dust and fire at the front side of the restaurant and we panicked,” Said Muktar told AFP.

"I and several other people rushed towards the main entrance, but it was completely inaccessible,” he said, adding that he saw people "bleeding and screaming”.

"The whole situation was chaos,” he said.

An AFP journalist said firefighters, police and ambulances rushed to the scene of the explosion, which is close to the presidential palace and was very busy at the time of the bombing.

‘All-out’ war

There had been a relative lull in attacks in recent months as the government presses on with an offensive against the Islamist militants.

But on Saturday, five inmates said to be Al-Shabaab fighters were killed in a shootout with guards in an attempted jail break from the main prison in Mogadishu.

Three guards were also killed and 18 others wounded, prison officials said, after the inmates managed to get hold of weapons.

Somalia’s President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud has vowed "all-out” war against the jihadists and government troops have joined forces with local clan militias in a military campaign supported by an African Union force and US air strikes.

But the offensive has suffered setbacks, with Al-Shabaab earlier this year claiming it had taken multiple locations in central Somalia.

Although driven out of Mogadishu by AU forces in 2011, Al-Shabaab still has a strong presence in rural Somalia.

Somalia last month called for the African Union to slow the planned withdrawal of its forces from the troubled country.

UN resolutions called for troop numbers in the AU peacekeeping mission, known as ATMIS, to be reduced to zero by December 31 with security handed over to the Somali army and police.

The third and penultimate phase was to see the departure of 4,000 soldiers out of a total 13,500 ATMIS troops by the end of June.

But Somalia’s government said it wanted to see only 2,000 troops leave in June and the remaining 2,000 in September. — AFP

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