A suspected al-Qaeda-linked attacker disguised as a government soldier blew himself up on Monday inside the presidential compound in Mogadishu, a security official told AFP.
It was not immediately clear whether any other casualties resulted from the attack, which took place as a convoy of the African Union mission in Somalia (AMISOM) was entering the compound.
"One man believed to belong to the Shebaab managed to enter the presidential compound. He passed the first gate but AMISOM opened fire," the government official said on condition of anonymity, referring to the insurgent group.
"He was shot before he could reach the second gate and he detonated his suicide vest," the official added.
The official could not confirm whether President Sharif Sheikh Ahmed was in the palace at the time of the attack.
He also said he was checking information that a second attacker might still be at large in the area.
The brazen attack came less than two weeks after a suicide squad from the al-Qaeda-inspired Shebab, an insurgent group bent on toppling Sharif, attacked Mogadishu's international airport.
Their operation was thwarted by AMISOM before they could reach the airport's passenger terminal and resulted in the deaths of five attackers, two members of the African force and three civilians.
On August 24, two Shebab gunmen stormed a hotel in the government-controlled part of the Somali capital that usually houses members of parliament and other officials.
The two militants blew themselves up, leaving a total of 32 people dead, including four lawmakers, following the shooting rampage.
Security sources in Mogadishu say that the Shebab, whose leadership last year proclaimed its allegiance to Osama bin Laden, has a safe house in Mogadishu with suicide bombers ready to be deployed at any moment.
Observers have argued that the Shebab were increasingly resorting to spectacular suicide operations against high-value targets because the offensive they launched in May 2009 was failing to break AMISOM's defences.
The African force, which currently consists of 7 200 troops from Uganda and Burundi and was first deployed in March 2007, is the last barrier preventing the insurgents from taking full control of Mogadishu.
AMISOM, whose job has been mainly to protect Sharif and his transitional federal government (TFG), has been calling for further troop contributions and a more robust mandate that would allow it to go after the Shebab.
Speaking to reporters in Mogadishu on Sunday, Prime Minister Omar Abdirashid Sharmarke praised AMISOM and government troops for fending off the Islamist insurgent offencive and called for scaling up the fight.
"We also have to think of another option, an option of opening a new front different from Mogadishu and ... opening fronts in central regions, Bay and Bakol, from the (southern) Juba land areas," he said.
The Shebab currently control most of the country but the premier said the long-awaited nationwide offensive could take place by year's end.
Source: Sapa-AFP
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