Somalia's Shebab insurgents said they had assassinated a former lawmaker and his bodyguard and wounded another MP in a drive-by shooting in Mogadishu today to show the government they remained a threat.
Gunmen in a moving car opened fire as the lawmaker drove through the centre of the city, before racing off, witnesses said. MP Mustafa Mayow was wounded in the attack.
"The government say they have eradicated the Shebab from Mogadishu, but this is to show that we are here and active," Shebab spokesman Abdiaziz Abu Musab told AFP.
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The Al-Qaeda-affiliated Shebab rebels are fighting to overthrow the country's internationally-backed government.
At least five lawmakers have been killed in Mogadishu this year. The extremists say they are targeting MPs as they allowed the deployment of foreign troops on Somali soil.
Recent Shebab attacks in Somalia have targeted key government and security sites in an apparent bid to discredit claims by the authorities and African Union troops that they are winning the war.
On Wednesday a Shebab suicide bomber killed four security guards and bystanders when they rammed a car packed with explosives into a United Nations convoy.
The Shebab have also stepped up operations in neighbouring Kenya, and on Tuesday massacred 36 non-Muslim quarry workers in a Kenyan border town.