MOGADISHU: Somalia’s president sacked his police and intelligence chiefs
Wednesday after Islamist Shabab fighters launched a major assault
against his palace for the second time this year.
“Both the police
and intelligence chiefs were replaced, and the minister for the national
security was named,” Information Minister Mustafa Duhulow said.
Recent
Shabab attacks have targeted key areas of Somalia’s government or the
security forces, apparently to discredit claims the authorities are
winning the war against the Islamists.
A Shabab spokesman confirmed
that the group was behind the attack late on Tuesday, and claimed their
commandos had managed to seize President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud’s office
inside the compound known as Villa Somalia.
However, government dismissed their claims, saying the Al-Qaeda-linked gunmen had been killed near the entrance of the compound.“Of the four attackers, three were killed in the car park and one was captured,” Duhulow said.
A
security official had told AFP earlier that at least nine attackers
were involved, and had all been killed. They had been dressed in
government army uniforms.
Bomb disposal experts detonated several
explosive devices, “including a suicide vest that one attacker was
wearing that had failed to detonate,” Duhulow added.
Mohamud, who was
not in the complex at the time of the attack, later delivered a defiant
message close to the charred wreckage of the car bomb that gunmen used
in their attempt to storm the compound.
“I am here to stay, with
Allah’s will... I say to them, you will not kill us, and nor will you
demolish our spirit,” Mohamud said, also thanking the 22,000-strong
African Union force who helped battle the attackers and guard the
president.
Khalif Ahmed Ereg, a former intelligence chief, was named as Somalia’s new national security minister.
The
post had been empty after his predecessor resigned in April following a
suicide attack against the national parliament while MPs were in a
meeting, killing several guards and staff.
Mohamed Abdulahi Hassan was appointed as the new intelligence chief, and Mohamed Sheik Hassan as police chief.
The
attack on Tuesday appeared to be a repeat of a Shabab assault against
the presidential palace in February, when the Islamists, wearing Somali
army uniforms, managed to penetrate the complex with a car bomb before
being killed.
The Shabab commander in Mogadishu, Sheikh Ali Mohamed
Hussein, vowed last month that the capital would become the “frontline”
for assaults.
Hard-line Shabab insurgents once controlled most of
southern and central Somalia, including large parts of the capital, but
were driven out of fixed positions in Mogadishu and Somalia’s major
towns by the African Union force.
AU troops launched a fresh
offensive in March against Shabab bases, and although they seized a
series of towns, the insurgents are thought to have fled in advance and
suffered few casualties.
The Shabab have also increased their scope
of operations since last September, when they launched an attack on
Nairobi’s Westgate mall in which at least 67 people were killed.
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