(Bloomberg) — At least 32 people were killed and more than 60 injured when a suicide bomb detonated at a popular beach hotel in Somalia’s capital of Mogadishu on Friday night, police said.

The attack was claimed by the Islamic militant group al-Shabaab, an affiliate of al-Qaeda that operates in East Africa and has waged an insurgency against Somalia’s government for some 17 years. It was quickly condemned by the U.S. and the European Union, among others.

Somalia
Relatives carry the body of a woman killed in Mogadishu on Aug. 3, 2024, where an Al-Shabaab suicide bomber and gunmen attacked a busy beachfront spot in the Somali capital Mogadishu.Photo by HASSAN ALI ELMI /AFP via Getty Images

Somali Prime Minister Hamza Abdi Barre and President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud met Saturday with security agencies, according to local media. Such attacks are “a direct threat to the very fabric of our nation,” the premier said in a statement.

The Associated Press reported that an attacker was seen wearing an explosives-laden vest moments before the man blew himself up next to the hotel.

Police said there were six attackers in all, including the bomber and gunmen, who were successfully “neutralized” after engaging in skirmishes.

Ahmed Hashi, a police officer at the scene at Lido Beach, told Bloomberg News on Saturday that a car on site “contains one of the most powerful explosives ever.” The area remains cordoned off.

“This brutal attack at Lido Beach against civilians underlines yet again al-Shabab’s barbarity towards their own compatriots,” the EU’s diplomatic service said in a statement. The US embassy in Mogadishu said its commitment to supporting efforts to defeat the terror group was “unwavering.”

Somalia
A Somali policeman patrols near the area of an attack in Mogadishu on Aug. 3, 2024, after An Al-Shabaab suicide bomber and gunmen attacked a busy beach in the Somali capital Mogadishu.Photo by HASSAN ALI ELMI /AFP via Getty Images

Hassan, Somalia’s president, vowed to escalate the fight against al-Shabaab when he took office in 2022, as the militant group threatened to broaden attacks into Ethiopia and carry out more in Kenya.

Somalia has been battling the insurgency since 2006 and suffers regular blasts in the capital and elsewhere. In July, a car bombing killed five people who had gathered in Mogadishu to watch the finals of the European soccer championship.

The Lido Beach area has been targeted by al-Shabaab-linked militants in the past, including in 2023, when several people were killed after an hours-long siege.

Separately, at least seven people were killed when a minibus was hit by a roadside bomb in the Middle Shabelle region, northeast of Mogadishu, on Saturday.

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