A car in southern Somalia has been hit by a suspected US drone
strike, killing two fighters from the armed group al-Shabab, witnesses
said. The men were the only occupants of the vehicle and no one else was harmed, they said. Witnesses blamed the United States, which has carried out drone strikes in Somalia before, for the attack.
Four witnesses at the scene confirmed the strike to Al Jazeera and
said that both fighters killed were Somali. The rebels are known to have
foreign fighters in their ranks. Al-Shabab, a rebel group fighting Somalia’s Western-backed government, did not comment. The witnesses said the strike happened near the town of Jilib, 114km
north of al-Shabab’s former stronghold of Kismayu. Jilib is the most
populous town in the horn of Africa nation’s Middle Juba region. “It was after afternoon prayers between 1:30pm and 2pm when I heard a
loud bang. Just one big bang,” a witness from Jilib told Al Jazeera.
“I came to the scene shortly after. I saw two dead bodies. Then
al-Shabab fighters came to scene and took the bodies from the Suzuki
vehicle. It was a drone strike.”
Earlier this month, US forces carried out a dawn-raid on an al-Shabab
base in the town of Barawe, killing one of the group’s fighters.
In September, al-Shabab launched an assault on a shopping mall in
Nairobi, the capital of neighbouring Kenya, which left at least 67
people dead. [AlJazeera]
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