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Somalia PM vows accountability over deadly hotel siege
Somalia's prime minister pledged that the government will be held accountable over the deadly Mogadishu hotel siege by Al-Shabaab jihadists whom he branded "children of hell".
Hamza Abdi Barre also called on Somalis to unite in the fight against the Al-Qaeda-linked group which has been waging a bloody insurgency in the impoverished Horn of Africa nation for more than 15 years.
"There will be accountability in the government... anyone who neglected the responsibility he was entrusted with will be held accountable," Barre told reporters late Sunday.
He was speaking after visiting a hospital treating wounded victims of the bomb and gun attack on the Hayat Hotel that the health ministry says claimed the lives of 21 people and wounded 117.
The 30-hour siege was the deadliest attack in Mogadishu since the new President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud was elected in May after a protracted political crisis.
Police said more than 100 people, including women and children, had been rescued during the siege, which began on Friday evening and finally ended around midnight Saturday after security forces bombarded the hotel.
"There is only one of two choices here, we either allow Al-Shabaab -- the children of hell -- to live, or we live. We cannot live together," said Barre, who was appointed prime minister in June.
"I call on the Somali people to unite to fight against the enemy... so that what they did now will never happen again.
"The fight against them has already started taking place around several locations," he said, without elaborating.
- 'Abandon Al-Shabaab' -
The Hayat was a favoured meeting spot for government officials and scores of people were inside when a suicide bomber triggered a massive blast, forcing his way onto the premises along with heavily-armed gunmen.
Minutes later, a second explosion struck as rescuers, security forces and civilians rushed to help the injured, witnesses said.
Al-Shabaab has carried out several attacks in the mainly Muslim country since Mohamud took office, and last month launched an incursion into neighbouring Ethiopia and raided a military base on the border.
Former Al-Shabaab commander Mukhtar Robow, who is now religion minister in Barre's cabinet, condemned the attack and called on fighters to abandon the group.
"I call on them to repent... I say to them 'you know that this is not right so repent and abandon (Al-Shabaab) and God willing you will survive'," he said.
"Society everywhere should know that their interest lies in uniting to fight against them," he added.
Somalia's allies, including the United States, Britain, the European Union and Turkey, as well as the UN, strongly condemned the attack, as did ATMIS, the African Union force tasked with helping Somali forces take over primary responsibility for security by the end of 2024.
Earlier this month, Washington announced its forces had killed 13 Al-Shabaab operatives in an air strike, the latest since President Joe Biden ordered the re-establishment of a US troop presence in Somalia, reversing a decision by his predecessor Donald Trump.
The Islamist militants, who espouse a strict version of sharia or Islamic law, were driven out of Mogadishu by an African Union force in 2011.
But they still control swathes of countryside and retain the ability to launch deadly strikes, often hitting hotels and restaurants as well as military and political targets.
The Hayat Hotel assault was reminiscent of deadly sieges in neighbouring Kenya, one of the contributors to the AU force.
Al-Shabaab claimed responsibility for a four-day siege at the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi in September 2013 that killed 67 people and an hours-long attack on an upmarket hotel complex in the city in 2019 that claimed the lives of 21 people.
O.Ortiz--AT