At least 16 people have been killed
and more than 30 injured after a suicide bomber blew himself up in a crowded
restaurant in the central Somali town of Beledweyne.
The Islamist militant group al-Shabab has said it carried out
the attack.
The Somali government, backed by troops from several African
countries, is fighting al-Shabab for control of the country.
Al-Shabab said its target was Ethiopian and Djiboutian soldiers
in Beledweyne.
The bombing occurred at a tea shop popular with the troops in
Beledweyne, 300km (185 miles) north of the capital, Mogadishu, close to the
border with Ethiopia.
"Our main target was Ethiopian and Djibouti troops who
invaded our country," Sheikh Abdiasis Abu Musab, al-Shabab's military
operations spokesman, said.
But witnesses, including a Somali MP in Beledweyne, Dahir Amin
Jessow, have told the BBC that most of those killed were civilians.
"There is a lack of medicine in the hospital and they can't
cope with the flood of wounded patients, so we asked the central government to
send us planes to evacuate patients," Mr Jessow said by phone.
Al-Shabab militants have been driven out of Somalia's major
towns, including Mogadishu and the key southern port of Kismayo, by a
UN-mandated African Union force of some 18,000 soldiers.
But the militants still control large parts of southern Somalia.
Last month, the group claimed the attack on the Westgate
shopping centre in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, in which 67 people died during
a four-day siege.
It said it staged the attack in response to Kenya's army
carrying out operations on Somali territory
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