PHOTO | ARIS MESSINIS A group of migrants from Somalia that survived an accident in the Aegean Sea last week, arrive at the port of Piraeus in Athens on May 12, 2014. At least 22 migrants including four children drowned in the Aegean Sea on May 5, 2014 after a yacht and a dinghy carrying them towards Greek shores capsized. Eighteen people were found dead on board the 10-metre yacht.  AFP
MOGADISHU
African Union forces in Somalia Tuesday said a “cowardly” bomb attack the previous day had killed 19 people, nearly double the number initially reported.
The car bomb exploded on Monday outside a bank on a busy street in the southern Somali town of Baidoa.
“The blast killed 19 innocent victims and destroyed valuable property,” the AU force said in a statement, updating an earlier toll from the police of 10.
The town, which is under the control of government troops backed by AU soldiers, was wrested from the Al-Qaeda-linked al-Shabaab rebels two years ago. No one has claimed responsibility for the attack, but the Shebab have carried out a string of bombings and vowed to overthrow the war-torn country’s internationally-backed but fragile government.
“This was a cowardly attack, which highlights the vicious nature of the enemy who continues to target innocent civilians,” AU envoy to Somalia Mahamat Saleh Annadif said.
The Shebab have been driven out of fixed positions in Somalia’s major towns by the UN-mandated AU force, but still regularly launch attacks that include bombings and guerrilla-style raids.
Recent al-Shabaab attacks have targeted key areas of government or the security forces, in an apparent bid to discredit claims by the authorities that they are winning the war against the Islamist fighters.
Continued conflict, compounded by poor rains and funding shortfalls, are threatening the few gains made in Somalia since an extreme famine less than three years ago, with the United Nations and aid agencies warning the troubled country could be sliding back into a food crisis.
Some 250,000 people, around half of them young children, died in Somalia during the 2011 famine, according to the UN, which has acknowledged it should have done more to prevent the tragedy.
Today, over 50,000 severely malnourished children are at “death’s door”, a coalition of 22 international and Somali aid agencies warned earlier this month, with almost three million people in crisis and over one million forced from their homes.
The violence continues, with attacks even in the heart of the capital Mogadishu.