Uganda finds suicide vest, makes several arrests

KAMPALA, (Reuters) – Ugandan police have found an  unexploded suicide vest and arrested six of the more than 20  Somalis and Ugan-dans suspected of planning twin bombings that  killed 76 soccer fans on Sunday, an intelligence source said.

Somali al Shabaab Isla-mists linked to al Qaeda said they had carried out the attacks on a crowded restaurant and a rugby  club in the Ugandan capital while fans watched the World Cup  final on television.

In Washington, a senior U.S. official said there were  indications that al Shabaab’s claim of responsibility was  authentic. It would mark the first time the group has struck  outside Somalia.

U.S. President Barack Obama said it was “tragic and ironic” that the explosions happened as people were watching the World  Cup being played in South Africa.

“On the one hand, you have a vision of an Africa on the  move, an Africa that is unified, an Africa that is modernizing  and creating opportunities,” Obama told the South African  Broadcasting Corp. “On the other hand, you’ve got a vision of al Qaeda and Al Shabaab that is about destruction and death.”

Washington has been in contact with Uganda and other governments in the region to determine whether al Shabaab is  plotting more attacks and to share intelligence and decide on  all “appropriate measures,” a senior U.S. official said.

An al Shabaab official said there had been no suicide  bombers involved in the attack on Uganda, which has  peacekeepers in Somalia.

A Ugandan military intelligence source told Reuters that  intelligence officials had received a tip-off last month that an attack was being planned. But the U.S. official said  Washington was not aware of any advance warning.

“On June 17 an informer from the Kisenyi suburb of Kampala  told intelligence that some Somalis were planning an attack during the World Cup,” the Uganda source said.

The official said more than 20 people, Somalis and  Ugandans, were involved in planning the attacks. “So far we  have arrested six people from that racket,” he said.

Al Shabaab has threatened more attacks unless Uganda and  Burundi withdraw their peacekeepers from the Afri-can Union peacekeeping force in Somalia, where the militants are fighting  the government and control large parts of the country.

Police said the suicide vest found late on Monday at a  third site was designed so it could be planted, rather than  worn.

“Rage blessed those who carried the attack and expected a  long life for them. That shows there was no suicide bomb. These  were planted,” a man who identified himself as Yonis, assistant  to al Shabaab spokesman Sheikh Ali Mohamud Rage, told Reuters.

As well as banning alcohol, al Shabaab has prohibited  watching soccer matches in areas under its control.

Coordinated attacks are a hallmark of al Qaeda and groups  linked to Osama bin Laden’s militant network. But for al  Shabaab, it would be the first time the militants have taken  their push for power internationally.

“I think that there’s a common recognition that this is a  new phase for al Shabaab in terms of expanding their geographic  reach unfortunately,” U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Janet  Napolitano told reporters.

“We are constantly looking at ways that we can increase our  preparation for, prevention of, and interdiction of any type of  terrorist attack before it should occur on our own soil,” she  said.

The U.S. official who briefed reporters in Washing-ton said  al Shabaab had been “on our radar screen,” had links to al  Qaeda in East Africa and al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.

The official said the Kampala attack was in line with  threats to broaden its targets, but did not directly answer a  question whether the group might pose a specific danger to the  United States.