According to report, police officer told Reuters that two car bombs had been used to gain access to the hotel on Friday evening - targeting its front barrier and gate.
After the
initial attack, a website affiliated to al-Shabab said a group of militants
were "carrying out random shootings" after having "forcibly
entered" the hotel - described as a popular location for employees of the
federal government to meet.
Somali
security forces have said they rescued 106 people who were trapped inside a
hotel that had been stormed by militants on Friday night.
Twenty-one
people are confirmed to have been killed in the 30-hour ordeal, the health
ministry said. Officials say the fight to retake the hotel is now over.
The
assailants used explosives to gain entry to Mogadishu's Hayat Hotel before
violently taking control.
Islamist
militant group al-Shabab has taken responsibility for the attack.
"I
would like to inform all Somalis that the operation at the hotel was concluded
at midnight," police Commander Abdi Hassan Mohammed Hijra told journalists
in a briefing that took place close to the site of the attack.
"It
is shocking that innocent people lost their lives here... The security forces
were engaged in rescuing the people one by one and in groups."
The death
toll could rise as there is the possibility that family members collected the
bodies of relatives before an official count was made, Health Minister Ali Haji
Adan said. He added that 117 people were injured, with 15 of them being in a
critical condition.
The hotel
has been largely destroyed following intense fighting between the militants and
security forces throughout Friday night and Saturday, with videos showing
explosions and smoke billowing from the building's rooftop.
"It
has been terrible, really terrifying living next door to the gunfire, the
explosions. It was one of the most horrible things I have ever seen in
Mogadishu," Abdisalam Guled, a former deputy director of Somalia's
national intelligence agency, told the BBC.
Security
forces struggled to gain access to the upper floors of the hotel for hours
because the gunmen, who were holding an unknown number of people hostage, had
reportedly bombed out the stairs needed for access.
An
affiliate of al-Qaeda, al-Shabab has engaged in a long-running conflict with
the federal government.
The group
controls much of southern and central Somalia, but has been able to extend its
influence into areas controlled by the government based in Mogadishu.
In recent
weeks, fighters affiliated with the group have also attacked targets along the
Somalia-Ethiopia border, which has raised concerns about a possible new
strategy by al-Shabab.
The attack
on Friday marks the first in the capital by the group since Somalia's new
President, Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, was elected in May.
Hotels and
restaurants have been frequent targets, but Mogadishu saw its deadliest attack
in October 2017, when more than 500 people were killed when a truck filled with
explosives was detonated at one of the city's busiest intersections.
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