20 February 2015
Last updated at 16:18
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The BBC’s Mary Harper reports: “Al-Shabab claimed the attack was fully justified… even in a prayer room”
Some 20 people, including senior officials, have been killed in an attack on a hotel in the Somali capital, witnesses have told the BBC.
The Central Hotel, often frequented by politicians, was hit by a car bomb and a suicide attack. Gunmen then stormed the hotel mosque and opened fire during Friday prayers.
An MP and Mogadishu’s deputy mayor were among the dead, the government says.
Islamist militant group al-Shabab has said it was behind the attack.
The al-Qaeda linked group has been driven out of the country’s major towns but still controls many rural areas in the south.
The BBC’s Mohamed Moalimu in the city says the area around the hotel has been cordoned off.
This car was destroyed in the explosion
“First the car bomb exploded at the gate of the hotel, then a suicide bomber blew himself up in the hotel compound,” police Major Nur Mohamed told Reuters.
Information Minister Mohamed Abdi Hayir Mareeye told the BBC that Somalia’s deputy prime minister and other ministers had been at the hotel at the time but had survived the attack.
An al-Shabab spokesman told BBC Somali analyst Mary Harper it had killed the officials while they were praying because they were “apostates”.
It has previously said it would target members of the government.
Earlier this month, al-Shabab shot dead an MP in a drive-by shooting in Mogadishu.
The Central Hotel is often frequented by government officials
The gunmen opened fire in the hotel mosque
Al-Shabab had said it would target government officials