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By Staff, Agencies Gunfire and explosions were heard in Somalia's capital Mogadishu in the early hours of Wednesday as Al Shabab terrorists attacked police stations and security check points. The al-Qaeda-linked group, which aims to topple Somalia's central government and impose severe laws, carries out frequent attacks against the government, including attacking a minibus carrying election delegates last week.

“The terrorists attacked the suburbs of Mogadishu and targeted our police stations and checkpoints,” Minister of Internal Security Abdullahi Nor wrote on Twitter.

“Our security defeated the enemy.” There were no immediate details on casualties.

Police will provide more details on the attacks, the minister added.

The attacks came at a time when the country is reeling under political instability because of sharp differences between clan leaders on the first democratic election in 50 years.

The elections were supposed to be held in February 2021 but clan leaders disagree on how to choose the new president.

Somalia has been in the grip of civil war for decades.

The rise of extremist groups such as Al Shabab has made settling the civil conflict difficult.

Al Shabab, which takes its name from the Arabic word for youth, began attracting attention in 2006 after an Ethiopian military intervention at a request from the transitional government at the time.

The group once held sway over Mogadishu and large portions of the Somali countryside.

However, an African Union-led military campaign and US air strikes have pushed it back from major population centers in recent years.

The Somali government, its allies in the region, and the West have been locked in a war of attrition for a decade with the extremist movement, which has also claimed responsibility for several attacks and bombings in neighboring countries

Original Article Source: Al Ahed News | Published on Wednesday, 16 February 2022 06:01 (about 808 days ago)