Somalia's Shebab militants claim deadly Uganda attacks
KAMPALA — Somalia's Al-Qaeda-inspired Shebab rebels claimed responsibility Monday for bombings in Kampala that killed 74 people as they watched the World Cup final, in the region's worst attacks in 12…
KAMPALA — Somalia's Al-Qaeda-inspired Shebab rebels claimed responsibility Monday for bombings in Kampala that killed 74 people as they watched the World Cup final, in the region's worst attacks in 12 years.The twin attacks in the Ugandan capital dampened Africa's post World Cup euphoria, drew a barrage of global condemnation and marked an unprecedented internationalisation of Somalia's two-decade-old civil war."We are behind the attack because we are at war with them," Ali Mohamoud Rage, the Shebab group's top spokesman told reporters in Mogadishu.The movement's top leader had warned in an audio message earlier this month that Uganda would face retaliation for contributing to an African Union force supporting the western-backed Somali transitional government.Explosions ripped through a sports bar and an Ethiopian restaurant in Kampala where people had gathered to watch the football World Cup final between Spain and the Netherlands."The latest official count is 74 confirmed dead," Fred Opolot, a Ugandan government spokesman, told AFP.Police Chief Kale Kayihura said one Irish woman was among the dead and added that two bodies had not been claimed by anybody and were "of interest" to the security services.He explained that three blasts went off and that while one was a planted explosive device, the other two might have been the result of suicide explosions.The blasts were the deadliest attacks in the region since 1998 bombings against the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.A US embassy spokeswoman confirmed one American was among the dead and an AFP correspondent saw at least three wounded US citizens at the city's main Mulago hospital.Suspicion immediately fell on the Shebab, whose overall leader Mohamed Abdi Godane had warned in an audio message earlier this month that Uganda and Burundi would be targeted.The two countries provide troops to the African Union mission in Somalia (AMISOM) which is fighting daily battles against the Shebab in Mogadishu in a desperate effort to prop up the government.The Sheba
last modification 2010-07-12 20:45:15
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