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Somali Islamists planning wave of bomb attacks: AU

shababA three year insurgency led by al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab militants has ravaged the bullet-scarred city and claimed at least 21,000 lives in the African nation since early 2007.

“Credible information reaching AMISOM indicates that some of the armed opposition groups are planning to carry out a series of synchronized suicide attacks and planting IEDs (improvised explosive device) in public places,” AMISOM said in a statement. “They have prepared several vehicles loaded with explosives both in Mogadishu and surrounding areas to carry out atrocities against the innocent civilian population,” it said. AMISOM said mosques and markets were the most likely targets and urged residents to be on the lookout for four Toyota 4x4s, a white lorry with an AU insignia, two Nissan diesel lorries, a “battlewagon” and a van.

Last weekend 40 people were killed in two attacks on mosques in Mogadishu and the southern port city of Kismayu.

Analysts say the Islamist fighters are increasingly copying the tactics of insurgents in Iraq where Sunni and Shia militia often target each other’s mosques. No group has claimed responsibility for the Somali attacks.

“The extremists’ forces have of late become desperate after losing the support of the people and experiencing infighting within their leadership,” AMISOM said.

JOURNALIST KILLED

In a separate incident in Mogadishu, Islamist gunmen shot dead a prominent journalist, the first reporter to be killed in Somalia this year, one of his colleagues said.

Sheikh Nur Abkey, who was in his sixties and worked for the state-run Radio Mogadishu, was killed in the Wardhigley neighborhood while he was on his way home late Tuesday.

“Al Shabaab men have killed Sheikh Nur Abkey … after they killed him, they called us and told us they killed him,” Abdirahman Yusuf, the editor of Radio Mogadishu, told Reuters.

Somalia is one of the world’s most dangerous countries for journalists. Last year nine were killed and some foreign journalists have been kidnapped by militants and held for ransom.

The chaos on land has allowed piracy to flourish. Earlier, pirates hijacked a China-bound oil tanker off the coast of Yemen with 23 Russian crew and crude oil worth $52 million on board.

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Reuters  (Writing by Jeremy Clarke; Editing by Richard Lough)

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