A suicide bomber detonated an explosives-laden vehicle at the gates of a local government headquarters in Somalia while another bomber targeted a nearby marketplace, killing at least 17 people and wounding more than 30, police said on Sunday.
Mogadishu police spokesman Abdisalam Yusuf said one bomber rammed the car into a checkpoint in Galkayo Town on Sunday morning after reaching the main gate of Puntland’s local government.
Puntland, a semi-autonomous state in northern Somalia, controls the northern part of the town, while the southern part is controlled by rival regional state Galmudug.
Somalian Prime Minister Omar Abdirashid Sharmarke condemned the twin blasts, saying that “evil-doers” had targeted innocent civilians.
The al-Qaeda-linked al-Shabaab group claimed responsibility for the attack.
The town, unlike other parts of the country where al-Shabaab continues a deadly guerrilla campaign, rarely sees such attacks.
The town’s main hospital received more than 15 wounded people, including some with horrific wounds, a nurse, Abdikareem Ali, told reporters.
“Some of them were burnt beyond recognition. It was a dark day,” he said.
Some of the bodies were discovered in nearby houses destroyed by the blasts, senior police officer Colonel Muse Hassan said.
Al-Shabaab is waging an insurgency against Somalia’s weak UN-backed government with the goal of establishing an Islamic emirate, ruled by a strict version of Shariah law.
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