Mortar fire hits Somali airport zone, wounds 9

A man rushes to the site of a blast near the airport in Mogadishu in 2014. Mortar fire on the zone around Mogadishu airport wounded nine people on October 13, 2019. PHOTO | MOHAMED ABDIWAHAB |

What you need to know:

  • The injured were three soldiers from the Amisom, one civilian Amisom worker, a UN mission staff member and four UN contract workers.
  • Witnesses inside the AMISOM told AFP the attack provoked panic at the base.

Mogadishu,
Mortar fire on the zone around Mogadishu airport wounded nine people Sunday, including staff at the African Union and UN missions located there, Somali police and UN sources said.

No group has so far claimed responsibility for the Sunday afternoon assault, but the Islamist militant group Shebaab has carried out similar attacks during more than ten years of fighting.

"Several rounds of mortar shells landed within the vicinity of the airport," police officer Mohamed Hassan told AFP.

While the police had no details on casualties, a UN source who asked not to be named said nine people had been injured but none seriously.

THREE SOLDIERS

The injured were three soldiers from the African Union Mission to Somalia (AMISOM), one civilian AMISOM worker, a UN mission staff member and four UN contract workers, the source added.

UN special representative for Somalia, James Swan, in a statement confirmed the attack had injured several people without giving further details.

"There is no justification for such despicable acts of violence, and the United Nations remains determined to support Somalia on its path to peace," the statement said.

Witnesses inside the AMISOM told AFP the attack provoked panic at the base.

One witness, Abdulahi Hassan, said: "Around three rounds of mortar shells struck close to the AMISOM hospital and the UN compound, three soldiers and several UN contractors were wounded."
The high-security zone around Mogadishu international airport houses not just international organisations but a number of embassies.

Al-Qaeda affiliate Shebaab has been fighting for more than a decade to overthrow successive internationally backed governments in Mogadishu.