Suicide bomber targets a Qatari delegation's convoy in Somalia

The suicide bomber detonated a car filled with explosives near the convoy in Mogadishu on Sunday morning, killing seven. The Qataris were unharmed.

A Somali man carries a wounded child in the back of a pickup truck to a hospital, following a suicide car bomb blast in the capital Mogadishu, Somalia Sunday. A Somali police official at the scene said four civilians and a soldier were killed after the bomber attempted to ram a car laden with explosives into a military convoy.

Farah Abdi Warsameh/AP

May 5, 2013

Seven people were killed Sunday morning when a suicide bomber attempted to ram a car laden with explosives into a military convoy escorting a four-member Qatari delegation, an official said.

Gen. Garad Nor Abdulle, a senior police official, said the members of the Qatari delegation who were being escorted in the interior minister's convey were unharmed and safely reached their hotel.

Abdulle said the interior minister was not in the convoy.

Why many in Ukraine oppose a ‘land for peace’ formula to end the war

Mohamed Abdi, an officer at the scene of the blast, said four civilians and a soldier died in the attack.

Two people died in hospital and 18 were being treated of wounds from the blast said, Dr. Duniya Mohamed Ali at the Medina hospital.

The Qatari delegates are undertaking development projects in Mogadishu, Somali president Hassan Sheikh Mohamud said.

Mohamud blamed Al Qaeda-linked Somali militant group Al Shabab for the attack. He said "suspects" have been arrested.

Soldiers fired in the air to disperse crowds that had gathered at the blast site at the busy KM4 junction.

Howard University hoped to make history. Now it’s ready for a different role.

The Somali government reopened key roads in the Somali capital, Mogadishu, four days ago which had been closed for security reasons. The roads were closed after the government received intelligence that militants were planning attacks, officials said.

KM4 is among the busiest roads in Mogadishu, largely used by government officials and African Union forces. It connects the presidential compound and other government offices to the airport.

The car bombing falls into a pattern of attacks blamed on the Islamic extremist group Al Shabab, which has been pushed out of much of the areas it occupied in South and Central Somalia by African Union troops.

Al Shabab once controlled almost all of Mogadishu. African Union and Somali forces pushed the radical rebels out of the city in 2011, but the fighters have continued to carry out bomb attacks.

Al Shabab claimed responsibility for an attack on Somali's Supreme Court last month that killed 35, including nine attackers.

Somalia's prime minister said that several experienced foreign fighters took part in attack on the Supreme Court, the most serious Islamic extremist attack on Mogadishu in years, while other officials indicated the explosive devices were more advanced than normal, a possible indication of greater involvement by Al Qaeda. The attack included six suicide bombings and two car bombs.

Al Shabab boasts several hundred foreign fighters, including some from the Middle East with experience in the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts. Al Shabab also recruits fighters from Somali communities in the United States and Europe.

In March, an explosives-filled car targeting a truck of government officials hit a civilian car and exploded, setting a mini-bus on fire and killing at least seven.