Djibouti has sent a team of 30 doctors with medical supplies to neighbouring Somalia following the deadly attack in Mogadishu over the weekend.

The gesture was confirmed by Yusuf Garaad, Somalia’s Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation in a tweet on Monday.

In the wake of the attack, Somalia’s information minister disclosed that Kenya, Djibouti and Ethiopia had all offered to send medical aid to assist the country.

Thank you #Djibouti for bringing much needed medicine and medical professionals to #Mogadishu, #Somalia. — Yusuf Garaad (@MinisterMOFA) October 16, 2017

Djibouti becomes the first African country to send concrete assistance beyond the messages of condolence and condemnation. The incident is said to be the deadliest single bomb attack in Mogadishu.

The death toll has gone past 300 mark with hundreds injured. The first country to render assistance was Turkey. They flew planes to Somalia to carry severely injured persons to Turkey for medical treatment.

BREAKING: Djibouti sends 30 doctors to Mogadishu to help treat the wounded. #Somalia pic.twitter.com/5kBr1QWecp — Harun Maruf (@HarunMaruf) October 16, 2017