Feral Jundi

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

News: Suicide Attacks Kill Dozens in Somalia

Filed under: Somalia — Tags: , , — Matt @ 1:27 PM

   The thing I wanted to note in this story, besides the fact that I loath the mufsid Shabaab, is that they were able to get a VBIED into the compound to detonate.  Who was the security manager of that facility, because obviously they dropped the ball.  Have they not witnessed the attacks in Pakistan or when the UN was attacked by VBIEDs in Iraq–where is the memory of that?  You must control vehicles, and you must treat each one as a threat until they have been searched.  And the searches need to be happening far away from the people.  

    You would think that this would be common sense, no matter who is running operations out there.  I just shake my head when I hear about ‘vehicles or people’ slipping past security and detonating.  If care was taken to prepare the defense and implement a best industry practices security plan, maybe this kind of thing could have been prevented. My guess though, is yet again a organization (the UNPD) was paying peanuts, and they got monkeys.  Pay the money for quality security professionals and security equipment, and give your employees the best shot at survival out there. It is the right thing to do, and to me, your number one priority is to protect your people so they can do their good work. –Head Jundi      

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Suicide attacks kill dozens in Somalia

Three car bombs attack UN, diplomatic and government institutions in the breakaway Somaliland region

Wednesday October 29 2008 17.14 GMT

 

A wave of synchronized suicide attacks on UN, diplomatic and government institutions in northern Somalia killed up to 31 people today.

Three car bombs detonated in Hargeisa, the capital of the breakaway Somaliland region. Another two vehicles exploded in neighbouring Puntland, which, like Somaliland, has been relative peaceful compared to the rest of the country.

The careful coordination and nature of the attacks is unprecedented in Somalia and marks a serious deterioration in an already dire security situation. Suspicion immediately fell on the radical Shabaab militia, which is part of much broader Islamist-led resistance fighting against the Somali government and occupying Ethiopian troops.

In Hargeisa, the Ethiopian consulate suffered the greatest damage, with up to 20 people reported dead. An attack on the president’s palace killed at three people, including the presidential secretary, while two workers died at the headquarters of the UN Development Programme (UNPD).

“A vehicle forced its way into the compound and then exploded,” said a UNPD spokesperson in Nairobi. “It appears that the driver of the car was still inside.”

The suicide bombers, who were reported to have used driving four-wheel drive vehicles, struck within a few minutes of each other.

In Bossaso, Puntland’s main city, explosive-laden cars detonated at separate interior ministry offices responsible for combating terrorism, killing six people. Dozens were injured in the five attacks.

“I fear that this is exactly what it looks like – the Shabaab,” said a military expert on Somalia, who cannot be named because of his position. “We expected them to launch high-profile attacks, but this was extraordinary, requiring a large coordinated and concealed effort.”

Analysts believe the timing of the bombings was no accident. Regional heads of state, including Somalia’s president, Abdullahi Yusuf, were meeting yesterday in Nairobi to discuss the country’s future. Peace efforts had received a boost over the weekend when Yusuf’s government and the opposition Alliance for the Re-liberation of Somalia (ARS) signed a deal in Djibouti agreeing to a ceasefire, and a phased withdrawal of Ethiopian troops.

But a breakaway wing of the ARS, as well as the Shabaab, rejected the deal. They refuse to enter negotiations before the complete withdrawal of the Ethiopian forces that invaded Somalia in December 2006 to oust an Islamist authority from power.

Previously during peace negotiations the Shabaab has launched large attacks, mainly in Mogadishu, to demonstrate that they have control on the ground.

“It’s clear that the Shabaab, or jihadis or whatever you want to call them, are trying to make a statement that they target any place in Somalia, not just the south,” said a Western diplomat in Nairobi. “But we cannot let this undermine the Djibouti agreement, and we have to expect and accept that these sort of attacks may continue in the short term.”

Previously there have only been one or two small suicide attacks in Somalia. Yesterday, in the Islamist-controlled port city of Kismayo, a 23-year woman accused of adultery was stoned to death in public – the first such execution in two years.

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