Deadly attack targets Somalia food convoy
- Published
At least 20 people, including women and children, have been killed and food aid destroyed after militants attacked several vehicles in Somalia's central Hiiraan region.
"They put a bomb while people were in the car and blew it up," the region's governor told the ´óÏó´«Ã½ Somali service.
Islamist militant group al-Shabab has said it was targeting a government-affiliated armed group.
Somalia is facing what experts call its worst drought in a decade.
Threat from al-Shabab militants, who want to overthrow the central government, also continues to grow.
The al-Qaeda-linked group controls much of southern and central Somalia, but has been able to extend its influence into areas controlled by the government, which is based in the capital Mogadishu.
Two weeks ago its fighters stormed a hotel in the city and killed more than 20 people.
The governor of Hiiraan, Ali Jeyte Osman, said the death toll from Friday's attack could rise amid reports that up to 27 people had been killed.
"Some are injured and some ran away when the shooting started. The dead bodies are still being collected, including women and children," he said.
Mr Osman accused the militants of being at war with the civilian population in the region, accusing them of burning villages and destroying water wells.
Local clan leader Mohamed Abdirahman described the attack as horrible, adding that such an atrocity had never happed in the region before.
"These were innocent civilians who did nothing to deserve this," he was quoted by AFP news agency as saying.
Somalia President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud vowed that his government would "leave no stone unturned" in the fight against "terrorism" in the country.
In a statement al-Shabab said the lorries it attacked were carrying food supplies for a group of local fighters who have been backing the government's offensive against them.
An ongoing drought in the Horn of Africa has displaced hundreds of thousands of people in Somalia with the UN warning recently that worst was yet to come.
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