Air strike targets Al-Shabab in Somalia

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    At least two suspected al-Shabab fighters have been wounded after a military air strike hit a convoy near the coast of southern Somalia, witnesses have said.

    The overnight strike occurred close to an al-Shabab camp near the port town of Kismayo.

    “We heard bangs of explosions first and again after minutes, more loud blasts,” Ali Abdinur, a resident, told the Associated Press news agency. “I don’t know what happened but the place was an al-Shabab camp.”

    Hassan Yaqub, an al-Shabab leader, confirmed the attack and said two members of the group were wounded.

    “Two enemy aircraft attacked our mujahedeen fighters at a time they were conducting a security patrol near Kismayo,” Yaqub told a local radio station.

    Al-Shabab is the former military wing of the deposed Islamic Courts Union that ruled Somalia before an Ethiopian-led invasion in 2007.

    It was not immediately clear who was behind the strike, but US aircraft have attacked al-Shabab fighters in Somalia before.

    A US air strike killed a senior leader of the group in 2008, while a US commando raid in 2009 killed an al-Shabab member wanted for the 2002 car bombing of a Kenyan beach resort.

    Somalia’s fragile, UN-backed government, established in 2004, has been battling al-Shabab who control much of the country’s south and centre.

    The government controls only a few blocks of Mogadishu and relies on African Union peacekeeping troops to protects key government officials and installations.

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    Air strike targets Al-Shabab in Somalia