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Leader of Garissa University attack killed in Somalia raid

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A senior Shabaab commander suspected of organising the 2015 attack on Kenya's Garissa University has been killed in a special forces raid in southern Somalia, a local official said Wednesday, as the Al-Qaeda-linked group launched a deadly assault on a top Mogadishu hotel.

At least 10 people, including two lawmakers, were killed in the car bomb and gun attack at the Ambassador Hotel, according to medical and security sources, while dozens more were injured.

Fighting between Somali security forces and Shabaab Islamists at the hotel raged into the evening, some five hours after the attack began.

In the coastal Somali town of Kismayo meanwhile, a local security official said the suspected architect of the bloodbath in Garissa had been killed in a raid in southwestern Somalia in the night from Tuesday to Wednesday.

Kenyan soldiers run towards Garissa University campus after an attack on April 2  2015
Kenyan soldiers run towards Garissa University campus after an attack on April 2, 2015
Carl de Souza, AFP/File

"Sixteen armed men, four of them senior commanders including Mohamed Mohamud Ali known as Dulyadin... were killed by the Somali commandos and the special forces of the Jubaland," said Abdirashid Janan, minister of state security for Jubaland, an autonomous region in southern Somalia.

Local officials paraded the bodies of the four suspected commanders in the streets of Kismayo.

The April 2, 2015 assault at Garissa University College, 365 kilometres (225 miles) northeast of the Kenyan capital Nairobi, left 148 people dead, 142 of them students.

They were slain in their dormitories or rounded up and executed in a hall of residence.

The operation was carried out by four gunmen from the Shabaab, Al-Qaeda's East Africa branch.

People stand with wooden crosses in Nairobi on April 7  2015 during a vigil for victims of the attac...
People stand with wooden crosses in Nairobi on April 7, 2015 during a vigil for victims of the attack on Garissa University in eastern Kenya
Tony Karumba, AFP/File

It was Kenya's bloodiest terror attack since Al-Qaeda bombed the US embassy in Nairobi in 1998, killing 213 people.

Last July, the Kenyan government said that Dulyadin -- also known by the aliases of Kuno and Gamadhere -- had been killed in a US drone strike, but it swiftly backtracked on the claim.

There was no immediate confirmation of Dulyadin's death from Kenyan authorities. "It happened in an area which is not under our control," Kenyan military spokesman David Obonyo told AFP late Wednesday.

- US drone strike -

Separately Wednesday, Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook said a senior Shabaab military commander, Abdullahi Haji Da'ud, was "presumed killed" following a US air strike on May 27.

Wrecked cars burn at the scene of an attack at the Ambassador Hotel  on June 1  2016 in Mogadishu
Wrecked cars burn at the scene of an attack at the Ambassador Hotel, on June 1, 2016 in Mogadishu
Mohamed Abdiwahab, AFP

"Da'ud was one of Shabaab's most senior military planners and served as a principal coordinator of (the group's) militia attacks in Somalia, Kenya, and Uganda," Cook told reporters in San Diego.

Shabaab fighters were chased out of Mogadishu in 2011 but the group remains a dangerous threat.

It has vowed to overthrow the internationally-backed government in Somalia, which is being buttressed by a continent of some 22,000 troops from the African Union.

It has frequently carried out attacks in neighbouring Kenya and vowed retribution against "Western crusaders" who it says are guilty of offences against Muslims in Somalia.

- 'Burned bodies' -

A victim is carried away from the Ambassador Hotel after a car bomb exploded on June 1  2016 in Moga...
A victim is carried away from the Ambassador Hotel after a car bomb exploded on June 1, 2016 in Mogadishu
Mohamed Abdiwahab, AFP

The Shabaab group was quick to claim Wednesday's assault on the Ambassador Hotel.

"The attack was started with a heavy explosion and members from the Mujahedeen fighters stormed the building," it said in a statement.

"A VBIED (vehicle-borne improvised explosive device) exploded at the Ambassador Hotel, Makkah Almukarramah street," a security source told AFP.

"According to latest information received there was a follow-up complex attack and the hotel was penetrated and an ongoing fire fight is in progress," the security source added.

Witnesses described scenes of carnage.

"I was a few metres (yards) away from the hotel when the blast occurred. It was a very heavy one and it destroyed the whole area. I saw the dead bodies of seven people, most of them burned," Mohamed Elmi said.

Another witness, Ibrahim Sheikh Nur, said he saw "several dead bodies outside the hotel".

"The security forces are now inside and the whole area is cordoned off."

A senior Shabaab commander suspected of organising the 2015 attack on Kenya’s Garissa University has been killed in a special forces raid in southern Somalia, a local official said Wednesday, as the Al-Qaeda-linked group launched a deadly assault on a top Mogadishu hotel.

At least 10 people, including two lawmakers, were killed in the car bomb and gun attack at the Ambassador Hotel, according to medical and security sources, while dozens more were injured.

Fighting between Somali security forces and Shabaab Islamists at the hotel raged into the evening, some five hours after the attack began.

In the coastal Somali town of Kismayo meanwhile, a local security official said the suspected architect of the bloodbath in Garissa had been killed in a raid in southwestern Somalia in the night from Tuesday to Wednesday.

Kenyan soldiers run towards Garissa University campus after an attack on April 2  2015

Kenyan soldiers run towards Garissa University campus after an attack on April 2, 2015
Carl de Souza, AFP/File

“Sixteen armed men, four of them senior commanders including Mohamed Mohamud Ali known as Dulyadin… were killed by the Somali commandos and the special forces of the Jubaland,” said Abdirashid Janan, minister of state security for Jubaland, an autonomous region in southern Somalia.

Local officials paraded the bodies of the four suspected commanders in the streets of Kismayo.

The April 2, 2015 assault at Garissa University College, 365 kilometres (225 miles) northeast of the Kenyan capital Nairobi, left 148 people dead, 142 of them students.

They were slain in their dormitories or rounded up and executed in a hall of residence.

The operation was carried out by four gunmen from the Shabaab, Al-Qaeda’s East Africa branch.

People stand with wooden crosses in Nairobi on April 7  2015 during a vigil for victims of the attac...

People stand with wooden crosses in Nairobi on April 7, 2015 during a vigil for victims of the attack on Garissa University in eastern Kenya
Tony Karumba, AFP/File

It was Kenya’s bloodiest terror attack since Al-Qaeda bombed the US embassy in Nairobi in 1998, killing 213 people.

Last July, the Kenyan government said that Dulyadin — also known by the aliases of Kuno and Gamadhere — had been killed in a US drone strike, but it swiftly backtracked on the claim.

There was no immediate confirmation of Dulyadin’s death from Kenyan authorities. “It happened in an area which is not under our control,” Kenyan military spokesman David Obonyo told AFP late Wednesday.

– US drone strike –

Separately Wednesday, Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook said a senior Shabaab military commander, Abdullahi Haji Da’ud, was “presumed killed” following a US air strike on May 27.

Wrecked cars burn at the scene of an attack at the Ambassador Hotel  on June 1  2016 in Mogadishu

Wrecked cars burn at the scene of an attack at the Ambassador Hotel, on June 1, 2016 in Mogadishu
Mohamed Abdiwahab, AFP

“Da’ud was one of Shabaab’s most senior military planners and served as a principal coordinator of (the group’s) militia attacks in Somalia, Kenya, and Uganda,” Cook told reporters in San Diego.

Shabaab fighters were chased out of Mogadishu in 2011 but the group remains a dangerous threat.

It has vowed to overthrow the internationally-backed government in Somalia, which is being buttressed by a continent of some 22,000 troops from the African Union.

It has frequently carried out attacks in neighbouring Kenya and vowed retribution against “Western crusaders” who it says are guilty of offences against Muslims in Somalia.

– ‘Burned bodies’ –

A victim is carried away from the Ambassador Hotel after a car bomb exploded on June 1  2016 in Moga...

A victim is carried away from the Ambassador Hotel after a car bomb exploded on June 1, 2016 in Mogadishu
Mohamed Abdiwahab, AFP

The Shabaab group was quick to claim Wednesday’s assault on the Ambassador Hotel.

“The attack was started with a heavy explosion and members from the Mujahedeen fighters stormed the building,” it said in a statement.

“A VBIED (vehicle-borne improvised explosive device) exploded at the Ambassador Hotel, Makkah Almukarramah street,” a security source told AFP.

“According to latest information received there was a follow-up complex attack and the hotel was penetrated and an ongoing fire fight is in progress,” the security source added.

Witnesses described scenes of carnage.

“I was a few metres (yards) away from the hotel when the blast occurred. It was a very heavy one and it destroyed the whole area. I saw the dead bodies of seven people, most of them burned,” Mohamed Elmi said.

Another witness, Ibrahim Sheikh Nur, said he saw “several dead bodies outside the hotel”.

“The security forces are now inside and the whole area is cordoned off.”

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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