Somali president escapes suicide car bomb attack that kills 11

SOMALIA: A car bomb killed five people and wounded several others outside parliament in Somalia's provincial capital Baidoa …

SOMALIA: A car bomb killed five people and wounded several others outside parliament in Somalia's provincial capital Baidoa yesterday in an assassination attempt on President Abdullahi Yusuf. The president later said that the attacker was a suicide bomber.

The president escaped unharmed. Six attackers were killed in a gun battle with Mr Yusuf's bodyguards after the blast, foreign minister Ismail Hurre Buba said in Nairobi.

"A car exploded when the president's convoy was passing on the way to his residence. It was an assassination attempt on the president."

Mr Hurre said five people were killed in the blast. He said the attack bore the hallmarks of al-Qaeda.

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"It was characteristically an al- Qaeda-type attempt [ with] a car being put next to other cars and an explosion taking place through remote control," he said.

He also linked yesterday's violence to the murder on Sunday of an Italian nun shot in Mogadishu.

"We think that the attempt in Baidoa is associated with the assassination of the Italian nun. Whoever was behind that is behind this," he said.

However, interior minister Hussein Mohamed Farah Aideed said it was too soon to point the finger at any group.

He added that security forces arrested two of the attackers.

A reporter at the scene saw black smoke billowing from burning cars close to the parliament building, which he said appeared to have dead bodies in them.

Government militiamen quickly cordoned off the area around the parliament building, a converted grain warehouse in the town 240km (150 miles) from the capital Mogadishu.

The attack is sure to heighten tensions in the volatile nation of 10 million between the internationally recognised but weak government and Islamists who control Mogadishu and a large swathe of southern Somalia.

The two sides have held two rounds of talks in the Sudanese capital Khartoum, pledging to form a joint military force.

"It will jeopardise the peace process if it becomes very obvious that the Islamists are behind this terrorist act," Mr Hurre said, adding that the government was still prepared to meet with "moderate elements" of the Islamic courts.

"We will not be deterred from that by an incident like today's," he said.

In July prime minister Ali Mohamed Gedi said Osama bin Laden had training bases in Somalia and was intent on plunging the country, deprived of effective central rule since 1991, into further chaos.

Islamist officials gave no immediate reaction to the bomb.

The attack took place as legislators met to approve a new cabinet. Witnesses said the parliamentary session carried on as normal after the blast, with 174 lawmakers out of the 199 present approving the cabinet.

Mr Gedi had named new ministers in August after Mr Yusuf declared the earlier cabinet ineffective and dissolved it on August 7th.

The explosion was the latest violence to flare up in the government's temporary seat of Baidoa.

In July, gunmen shot dead a Somali minister outside a Baidoa mosque, in what one senior official said was an organised killing. Last year Mr Gedi was the target of two assassination attempts in Mogadishu and Jowhar.

Somalia descended into lawlessness in 1991. The country's 14th attempt at central administration since then has been stymied by infighting and the newly empowered Islamists.