Somalia minister among 11 killed in Mogadishu hotel attack

A junior minister was among 11 people killed in an attack by Al-Qaeda-affiliated Shabaab militants on a hotel in the Somali capital, the foreign ministry said Sunday.

The body of Buri Mohamed Hamza, minister of state in the prime minister's office for the environment, has been retrieved from the collapsed building of the Naasa Hablood hotel, the ministry added.

"We extend our deepest condolences to the relatives of the minister who was killed in Mogadishu yesterday," a ministry statement read.

Scene of a car bomb attack claimed by Al-Qaeda-affiliated Shabaab militants on the Naasa Hablood hotel in Mogadishu on June 25, 2016 which killed at least 11 people ©Mohamed Abdiwahab (AFP)

Saturday's assault, the latest in a series by the Islamist group targeting hotels and restaurants, began when a suicide bomber detonated a car laden with explosives outside the building.

Gunmen then stormed the Naasa Hablood hotel in an assault lasting for several hours. Special security forces ended the siege after killing three attackers inside the hotel.

Two of the 11 dead were doctors, a security ministry spokesman said, while medical sources said some 20 civilians were wounded.

The Shabaab claimed responsibility for the attack through a statement on the Telegram smartphone app, saying their fighters had forced their way into the hotel.

The assault came three weeks after another attack quickly claimed the Shabaab group on the city's Ambassador hotel left 10 dead including two lawmakers when a huge car bomb ripped the front off the six-storey building.

In November last year, the Islamists carried out a similar attack on the Sahafi hotel in central Mogadishu, leaving at least 12 dead.

In recent months they have also claimed attacks on bases of the African Union peacekeeping mission in Somalia (AMISOM).