In Somalia’s capital, a jihadist bomb tests the limits of survivors

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In Somalia’s capital, a jihadist bomb tests the limits of survivors
In Somalia’s capital, a jihadist bomb tests the limits of survivors

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Abdirahman Abdillahi Kassim, a street vendor, survived two mass bombings by al-Shabaab jihadists in Somalia’s capital, Mogadishu. The first killed nearly 500 people, the second, at the end of October, more than 130.

But the horrific attacks also took a heavy personal toll on Mr. Abdirahman: his wife and daughter and a leg in the first bombing, his son and his remaining leg in the second. His brother, Mohammed Abdillahi Kassim, a singer who has faced threats from dissident jihadists, is now tending to his wounded sibling in a hospital in Mogadishu.

Why we wrote this

Not one suicide bombing, but two. This is what a Somali man survived, remarkably. But his losses were deep and tested his and Somalia’s resilience in the face of sustained attacks by al-Shabaab jihadists.

Even by the bleak standards of Somalia, which has endured 15 years of al-Shabaab’s often brutal presence over parts of its territory, Mr. Abdirahman’s personal tragedy stands out. For legions of Somalis, survival requires personal resilience, but the events this family experienced put that resilience to the test.

One of the few things the family says brings them some measure of happiness is the news that al-Shabaab is facing mounting losses as the government mounts a new offensive.

“Now they are busy running to save themselves” on the battlefield, Mr. Mohammed says with a small smile. “But they still have eyes on you.”

When the explosions went off, Abdirahman Abdilahi Kassim, a street vendor of gum, sweets and cigarettes, was being helped by his 11-year-old son Ibrahim near the Ministry of Education in Mogadishu.

The twin suicide car bombings on October 29 by al-Shabaab jihadists claimed more than 130 lives, so Mr. Abdirahman, pulled alive from the rubble, could be considered a lucky man. Perhaps even more so because, remarkably, he also survived a mass truck bombing at the same Mogadishu market junction in October 2017.

Yet that previous al-Shabaab attack, which killed nearly 500 people, also claimed the lives of his wife, Faiza Ali Qasim, and their 14-year-old daughter, Amina. And it cost him a leg.

Why we wrote this

Not one suicide bombing, but two. This is what a Somali man survived, remarkably. But his losses were deep and tested his and Somalia’s resilience in the face of sustained attacks by al-Shabaab jihadists.

This second attack took even longer, robbing Mr Abdirahman of his remaining leg – and his son.

His brother, Mohammed Abdillahi Kassim, has been caring for his injured sibling day and night in a hospital in Mogadishu. His eyes water and his voice breaks as he explains that he has not yet decided to tell his brother that Ibrahim did not survive.

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