12 dead in Islamist attack on Somali prison
By Susanna Capelouto, CNN, and Journalist Omar Nor, Re-possted by Abdulgafar Abdulrauf Adio
Islamist rebels dressed in government military uniforms approached
the gate of a high security prison in Mogadishu on Sunday, set off a car
bomb and fired their way into the building, eyewitness Farah Mohammed
told CNN.
They were Al-Shabaab
fighters, and security guards at the prison "foiled the attack" and
killed seven of the rebels, Somalia's Information Minister H.E. Mustafa
Duhulow said in a statement.
"The attackers exchanged
heavy gunfire with prison guards after detonating a car bomb at the main
gate," Mohamed said. "A plume of dark smoke could be seen rising from
the attacked complex."
During the assault on the
National Intelligence and Security Agency prison three security guards
and two civilians were also killed, 15 others were injured, Security
Ministry spokesman Mohamed Yusuf told CNN.
The attackers tried to
free their fellow Al-Shaabab members held at the prison, who were
sentenced to death by a Somali military court tribunal, said police
Officer Abdifarah Ali.
"We were behind today's
raid on NISA prison in Mogadishu," Al-Shabaab spokesman Sheikh Abdiaziz
Abu Musab said on pro-militant radio station Al-Andalus. "Our Mujahideen
forces stormed the complex and then sprayed the prison guards with
bullets and bombs," he said.
The government praised the security forces, saying it shows that Somalia has improved security.
"These terrorists groups
are against the security improvements we are currently experiencing here
in Mogadishu," Information Minister H.E. Mustafa Duhulow said in a
statement. "We say to them that these foiled attacks strengthen our
forces and prove their bravery to the people of Somalia," he said.
The NISA prison is
underground and is close to the Somali presidential palace in Mogadishu.
Hundreds of inmates, mostly Al-Shabaab members, are being held there.
Al-Shabaab is an al
Qaeda-linked militant group seeking to turn Somalia into a
fundamentalist Islamic state, according to the Council on Foreign
Relations.
The group claimed
responsibility for the deadly attack at a Kenyan mall last year and is
believed to be responsible for attacks in Somalia that have killed
international aid workers, journalists, civilian leaders and African
Union peacekeepers.
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