MOGADISHU: A prominent militia leader in southern Somalia said a suicide bomber killed six people in an attack on his home yesterday, pinning the blame on Al Qaeda-linked Shebab militants.
Iftin Hassan Basto, a tribal leader who has fought with the Islamist group in the past, said six people, including a child, were killed and seven injured.
“The explosion occurred soon after I entered the house,” Basto said in a statement.
“My security guards saw a man who tried to infiltrate them and when they confronted him, he blew himself up.”
The alleged attack took place in the port city of Kismayo, a former stronghold of Somalia’s Shebab militants.
But the Shebab were quick to deny involvement in the explosion, instead claiming that one of Basto’s guards was responsible.
“There was no attack on his home, but his amateur guards fired a rocket launcher inside the house,” Abdulaziz Abu Musab, Shebab’s military spokesman said.
“The Shebab fighters have conducted no assault (...) the damage was self-inflicted by his soldiers,” he added.
One witness to the explosion, Ali Mohamed, said: “The explosion was huge and several dead bodies were removed from the house. Security forces have cordoned off the area after the explosion.”
Kismayo was a stronghold of the Shebab before Kenyan troops — along with local warlord Ahmed Madobe — captured it in late September 2012.
In mid-2013, Basto and another militia leader, Barre Hirale, challenged Madobe’s authority. Fighting occurred between the two groups in Kismayo, but Basto has since joined sides with Madobe.
AFP