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Deadly Car Bombs Hit Somaliland

Issue 354
Front Page
Index
News Headlines
Message Of The UN Resident Humanitarian Coordinator To Somalis
Local and Regional Affairs
Muslim Cleric Arrested In Somali Bombings
Massive Security Deployment In Somaliland As Death Toll Rises
UN Staff In Somalia Mourn Loss Of Colleagues Killed In Deadly Blast
Ban Deplores ‘Outrageous' Attack On UN Office And Other Sites In Northern Somalia
Mark Malloch-Brown Condemns Attacks
Form cabinet, Somalia told
Deadly Car Bombs Hit Somaliland
Bombings Have Markings Of Al-Qaeda: US Official
FIDH Condemns the Suicide Attacks in Somalia
AP IMPACT: Security Firms Join Somali Piracy Fight
Shipload of supplies escorted to Somalia
Flashback: Israeli Revealed as owner of South Sudan bound weapons ship
Editorial
 
The Terrorist Attacks On Somaliland
Supporting Somaliland's Democracy Against The Terror Act ?
Somaliland & Unisa's Department of Religious Studies represented at London 's 2008 Think Tank of the
Kenya On Heightened Terror Alert After Somaliland Bombings
Features & Commentry
Somalia 's Pirates Flourish In A Lawless Nation
‘It's A Great Time To Be A Pirate'
Somaliland Witness: 'Terrible Day'

Opinion

Somaliland Stands Firm Against Terrorism
It's Time To Take On The Gangsters Of The Sea
President Bush's Speech on Terrorism Undercut by Attacks in Somalia
Somalia 's Descent Into Chaos Predicted
Somaliland Organizations In Diaspora Condemn The Terrorist Attacks In Somaliland
Message Of Condolences And Condemnation
Will White People Riot?
The Hon Stephen Smith MP
 

People rush from the scene of a bombing in Hargeisa

The attacks were a shock to many in Hargeysa after years of peace

Hargeisa

Most of the casualties were in the Somaliland capital, Hargeysa

map

Hargeysa, October 29, 2008 – At least 29 people have died in a wave of coordinated car-bombings across northern Somalia .

Most of the casualties were in the Somaliland capital, Hargeysa, where the presidential palace, Ethiopian consulate and UN offices were targeted.

Two suicide attackers also killed six intelligence agents in their offices in neighboring Puntland, the region's president says.

These are the first suicide attacks in the two relatively stable regions.

Somaliland has declared independence from war-torn southern Somalia but this has not been internationally recognized.

The region is a US ally in the fight against Islamist militants in Somalia .

Body parts

Puntland's President Mohamoud Musa Hirsi Adde said that the attacks in both regions were coordinated, reports the AFP news agency.

"The whole plan was organized from the same place and by the same people," he said.

Somaliland President Dahir Riyale Kahin says the government is ready to defend the country.

The BBC's Jamal Abdi in Hargeysa says he saw body parts flying through the air after the attack on the Ethiopian consulate.

One of the buildings in the consulate was leveled to the ground and eight people were killed.

Our correspondent says the explosions shook surrounding buildings violently and there was gunfire after the last explosion.

He says the attacks came as a real shock to many people after years of peace.

Guards outside Somaliland 's presidential palace opened fire on the attackers blocking them from entering the compound.

One car managed to get into the heavily fortified UNDP office complex before the explosives were detonated.

Eyewitnesses at the UNDP office said the attackers parked the car next to one of the buildings, which suffered the worst damage and heaviest casualties.

There is a lot of anxiety around the city and cars have been blocked from approaching the three locations.

There is no information about who was responsible for the three attacks, which took place within seven minutes of each other.

But some suspect Islamist insurgents, given the coordinated nature of the bombings and the targeting of Ethiopia .

Rare criticism

The al-Shabaab group, which the US describes as a terrorist organization, refuses to join peace talks until Ethiopian troops agree to leave Somalia .

Ethiopia helped forces of the interim government oust Islamists from the capital, Mogadishu , in 2006 - since when Islamists have staged regular attacks in the city.

The bombings come as regional leaders meet in the Kenyan capital Nairobi , to discuss the ongoing crisis in Somalia and the performance of the transitional federal government.

On Tuesday, Ethiopian Foreign Minister Seyoum Mesfin made a rare criticism of the Somali government.

" Somalia 's problems are not security but political," Mr Seyoum said, blaming disputes between the country's leaders for the prolonged crisis.

The transitional federal charter, which was adopted in 2004, expires next year when a constitution is supposed to be drafted and elections held.

Source: BBC

 

 

 

 

 

 


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