Nairobi, July 12 (DPA) At least 74 people were killed and dozens injured in late night bombings targeting football fans in the Ugandan capital Kampala, with the Islamist al-Shaabab militia Monday claiming responsibility for the attacks.
Medical officials were concerned that the death toll could continue to rise as many victims were still fighting for their lives in hospital.
The al-Shaabab militia in Somalia had admitted to the bombings, which took place at venues where the World Cup final were being screened late Sunday.
A spokesman for the group, Sheikh Ali Muhamed Rage, said: ‘Our fighters have implemented the explosions as intended in Kampala.’
‘We have called the Ugandan people to give suggestions to their leaders to stop the massacres in Somalia, but they ignored our calls ignored our calls. We warn the Burundian people to withdraw their boys from Mogadishu or else they will face explosions in Bujumbura.’
‘We will continue our attacks until they withdraw,’ he concluded, referring to the presence of African Union peacekeepers in Somalia.
‘We have been suspecting that these people could be planning something like this,’ chief of police Kale Kayihura earlier told the New Vision newspaper. He said the bombings were carefully planned terrorist attacks and aimed at killing a large number of people.
‘These bombs were definitely targeting World Cup crowds,’ Kayihura told BBC.
President Museveni, inspecting the two bombing sites, vowed to bring those responsible to justice.
‘We will find the perpetrators wherever they are and bring them to justice,’ he said.
In Mogadishu, Somalian President Sheikh Sharif Ahmed issued a statement calling the bombings a ‘reprehensible terror act’.
Police spoke of two bomb blasts, one in an Ethiopian restaurant and another at the Kyadondo Rugby Club where a crowd of football fans had gathered to watch the match between Spain and the Netherlands.
But the Daily Monitor reported a possible third attack in the suburb of Ntinda. Many other restaurants and bars apparently closed out of fear of further attacks.
At the rugby club, the bomb went off around 11 p.m. (8 p.m. GMT), with the Daily Monitor newspaper reporting that at least 40 people were killed there.
Blood, clothing, shoes and destroyed furniture littered the ground while security and medical personnel attended to the injured.
At least 13 people, at least half of whom were foreigners, were killed in the Ethiopian restaurant blast.
Privately-owned radio stations quoted unnamed officials as saying that the dead included an American, Phillip Henn, who had died of his injuries at Kampala International Hospital. KFM radio reported that another three Americans had sustained injuries.
The German foreign office Monday confirmed that one German man had been injured in the bombings.
Somali extremists had threatened attacks in Kampala because Ugandan troops are among the 5,000 African Union peacekeepers in Mogadishu. Somali troops are also being trained by the European Union in Uganda.
The US, which lists al-Shabaab as a terrorist group, condemned the attacks and noted that Americans might have been among those killed or injured.
‘I join President Obama in strongly condemning today’s attacks in Kampala, Uganda, targeting innocent spectators watching the World Cup final,’ US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said in a statement late Sunday.
‘We understand that American citizens may have been injured or killed, and our embassy is reaching out to assist,’ she said. ‘Our condolences go out to the families and friends of the victims in the US and Uganda.’
The German government also condemned the bombings.
‘One can scarcely top the heinousness of attacking people while they are enjoying a peaceful festival of sport,’ Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said in a statement.
‘It shows the utterly inhuman despicableness of the people behind these attacks.’