MOGADISHU, Somalia, Sept. 18, 2006

Somali President Escapes Assassination

Abdullahi Yusuf's Brother, 10 Others Killed By Car Bombing, Gun Battle

  • Cars burn after an explosion in Baidoa, Somalia, Sept. 18, 2006. Photo

    Cars burn after an explosion in Baidoa, Somalia, Sept. 18, 2006.  (AP)

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(AP)  Somalia's president narrowly escaped an assassination attempt Monday when a car bomb exploded outside the parliament building, officials said. The blast and a subsequent gun battle left 11 people dead, including the president's brother.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack in Baidoa, the only town controlled by the government. But if it is linked to an Islamic militia that has seized control of much of southern Somalia, it could cause peace talks between the two sides to fall apart.

The bomb exploded outside the parliament building where President Abdullahi Yusuf had given a speech about 10 minutes earlier, said Mohamed Adawe, a journalist who witnessed the blast.

Yusuf's bodyguards chased the suspected bombers, killing six of them in a gun battle. The five other dead — including the president's brother — were in his convoy, officials said.

"This explosion was intended to kill the president, but he escaped and he is safe," government spokesman Abdirahman Dinari said.

Eight cars were burned in the blast, including three from Yusuf's convoy.

The blast came a day after a nun was gunned down outside a hospital where she worked in Mogadishu, about 150 miles from Baidoa. There was no claim of responsibility, but many fear the shooting could be linked to worldwide Muslim anger toward Pope Benedict XVI.

In a speech last week, the pope quoted a medieval text that characterized some of the teachings of Islam's founder as "evil and inhuman."

Somali Foreign Minister Ismail Mohamed Hurre said the government believes the nun's killing and Monday's car bomb have "the hallmarks of al Qaeda." The terror organization's leader, Osama bin Laden, has called Somalia a battleground in his war on the West.

"Osama bin Laden has made it clear he wants to do harm to the government and to the president in particular," Hurre told The Associated Press in Nairobi, Kenya. He also said the government believes the same people were responsible for both attacks. He did not elaborate.

Somalia has not had an effective central government since 1991, when warlords overthrew dictator Mohamed Siad Barre and then turned on one another, pulling the country into anarchy.

The current government was established two years ago with the support of the United Nations, but it has failed to assert any power outside its base in Baidoa.

An Islamic militia seized control of Mogadishu in recent months and has extended its reach over much of southern Somalia, in direct challenge to the government.

The militia has imposed strict religious rule in the areas under its sway, and its Islamic courts are credited with bringing a semblance of order to the country. Many in the West, however, fear a Taliban-style regime could emerge.


By Mohamed Olad Hassan
©MMVI The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Add a Comment
by is_mal September 18, 2006 3:43 PM PDT
Seriously, what good can come out of islam? If the Pope was wrong, then prove Him wrong. If he was not wrong, then why do they respond with violence?

I realize the Pope created a lose/lose situation for the "extemists", except that their views are no longer extreme, they are mainstream in an islamic tradition which began with the false prophet mohammed. "the edge of the sword" is in the koran, it cannot be taken out, it cannot be changed, it cannot be minimalized or overlooked.
It is also not the same as the violent thought demonstrated in the Psalms of Christian texts, which are over-ridden in their authority by the New Testament.

islam needs a new testament of peace if they want the shed their own image of hatred, which could only be the tool of the devil. Of course, if they had a new testament of their own, it would only serve to demonstrate the complete fallacy of the koran in its original text.
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by shutupmurtha September 18, 2006 4:13 PM PDT
Cartoons, Pope Quotes, Comedians, OH MY! These people need to GROW UP. This religion is the problem. What the Koran says is the root problem of this. They are taught that persecution is worse than death.

Slay them wherever ye find them (Christians and Jews) and drive them out of the places whence they drove you out, for persecution is worse than slaughter. - 2:191

This religion is the problem. They can not coexist in a civilized multicultural, religiously diverse society. It is strictly against their beliefs.

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by shutupmurtha September 18, 2006 4:17 PM PDT
I take that back, they (true Koran folling Muslims) can not coexists with other religions unless they are the dominant party. The Koran does give restricted permission for people to practice other religions, but people who practice those other religions must pay a tax or be killed and they can not show any sign that they are part of another religion other than islam. They are often humilated in countries where they are permited limited religous "freedom". It is more often now a days that they are just killed rather than allowed to practice religion freely.
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by shutupmurtha September 18, 2006 4:20 PM PDT
And actually Is_mal there is a doctrine of Abrogation in Islam, but unfortunatley this doctrine was used to get rid of the peaceful texts that contradicted the violent ones in Islam not Vice versa. So they (Muslims) got rid of the good texts to keep the hate passages.
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