PDA

View Full Version : Al-Shabab behind Kampala Bombing


akv
07-12-2010, 10:30
The Somali Islamist group al-Shabab has said it was behind twin blasts which hit the Ugandan capital Kampala on Sunday, killing 74 people.

A spokesman for the group, Sheikh Ali Mohamud Rage, threatened more attacks in a statement in Mogadishu.

Police said the bombings targeted football fans watching the World Cup final.

A Ugandan official said a Somali's head was found at the scene of one blast, and he may have been a suicide bomber.

Ugandan peacekeepers are in Somalia, and al-Shabab has threatened Kampala.

"Al-Shabab was behind the two bomb blasts in Uganda," Ali Mohamud Rage said.

"We thank the mujahideens that carried out the attack. We are sending a message to Uganda and Burundi, if they do not take out their Amisom (African Union Mission in Somalia) troops from Somalia, blasts will continue and it will happen in Bujumbura (the Burundi capital) too."

The explosions, which also injured about 70 people, ripped through a rugby club and an Ethiopian restaurant as football fans watched the last few minutes of the World Cup final.

The deadliest of the blasts was at the crowded rugby club. At both scenes chairs lay overturned, with blood and pieces of flesh on the floor.


Earlier in Mogadishu, an al-Shabab commander said he was pleased with the blasts in Uganda, but did not admit it was the militant group's work.

Sheik Yusuf Sheik Issa told the news agency Reuters: "Uganda is a major infidel country supporting the so-called government of Somalia.

"We know Uganda is against Islam and so we are very happy at what has happened in Kampala. That is the best news we ever heard."

Ugandan Internal Affairs Minister Matia Kasaija told the BBC that the severed head of "somebody from Somalia" had been identified at the scene of one blast.

Addis Ababa backs Somalia's government against the rebels. And Ethiopian troops invaded Somalia in 2006 to oust an Islamist movement, stoking an insurgency that still rages.

Al-Shabab has also in the past threatened to attack Kampala.

About 5,000 African Union troops from Uganda and Burundi are based in Mogadishu propping up the fragile interim government.

The Amisom force is engaged in frequent firefights with the Islamist insurgents that control much of southern and central Somalia.

Many - if not most - of those killed and injured in the Kampala blasts were foreign nationals, with both venues popular destinations for expatriates living in the capital.

One unnamed witness told the BBC how he was caught in the rugby club blast.

"I just heard the bomb. In fact, I blacked out... when I gained consciousness, then I started now, crawling, coming out," he said.

One of the dead was an American, reported to be an aid worker from California. The nationalities of the other people killed have not been released.

At least three Americans, members of a Church group from Pennsylvania, were wounded at the Ethiopian restaurant.

One, Kris Sledge, 18, of Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania, said from his hospital bed: "I remember blacking out, hearing people screaming and running."

Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni criticised the attackers and said his country would not "run away" from its commitments in Mogadishu.

"People who are watching football are not people who should be targeted. If they [attackers] want a fight, they should go and look for soldiers."

US President Barack Obama said the explosions were "deplorable and cowardly".

The African Union has said the attacks will not affect its summit, which is due to be held in Kampala later this month.


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/world/africa/10602791.stm

rdret1
07-12-2010, 18:03
And this is one of the groups we have had some "Americans" say they were going to join.

Richard
07-13-2010, 08:16
And so it goes...

Richard :munchin

Uganda Says It Thwarted Another Bombing
NYT, 13 July 2010

Ugandan police announced Tuesday that they had found an explosives-laden vest at a popular nightclub here in the capital, thwarting another potential bomb attack just days after three deadly explosions ripped through crowds watching the World Cup championship game.

(cont'd) http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/14/world/africa/14uganda.html?ref=africa

Penn
07-13-2010, 08:51
Found does not equate into thwarting

TrapLine
07-13-2010, 09:19
And this is one of the groups we have had some "Americans" say they were going to join.

Exactly, and some of them live pretty close to me. I am sure that they are all just "misinformed" and do not mean any harm:rolleyes:.

incarcerated
06-02-2011, 14:57
And this is one of the groups we have had some "Americans" say they were going to join.

http://ca.news.yahoo.com/somali-american-carried-suicide-attack-mogadishu-al-shabab-081350234.html

Somali-American carried out suicide attack of Mogadishu base, al-Shabab militants say

By Abdi Guled, The Associated Press
The Canadian Press
Thu, 2 Jun, 2011
MOGADISHU, Somalia - The militant group al-Shabab said the man who carried out a suicide bomb attack on a base in Mogadishu this week was a Somali-American, and an official said Thursday that separate clashes with militants in Somalia's capital left at least 17 civilians dead.

Al-Shabab said on its website Thursday that a 25-year-old man named Abdullahi Ahmed was the suicide bomber who attacked an African Union peacekeeping base in Mogadishu, Somalia's capital, on Monday, killing two AU troops and one government soldier.

Ahmed was said to have moved to Somalia from Minnesota two years ago.

The Internet report purported to quote Ahmed before his death saying that he wanted to carry out the attack because of abuses by Christians of Muslim countries.

If the report is confirmed, Ahmed would become at least the third Somali-American to have carried out a suicide bombing in Somalia.

Somali Islamic insurgents — some of whom have links to al-Qaida — have been recruiting young Somali men in America and other countries amid fears that insurgents could use the men to attack foreign targets....