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From this chaos will grow strength

By Hou Liqiang in Mogadishu, Somalia | China Daily Africa | Updated: 2015-07-31 09:32
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After waiting about a day, we finally received permission to visit the Jazeera Palace Hotel in Mogadishu on July 29.

A suicide bomber in a car rigged with explosives caused a blast there on July 26, killing at least 15 people, including a Chinese embassy security staff worker.

When we arrived, the scene was still one of chaos, with debris scatted everywhere. Almost the entire wall of one side of the hotel collapsed in the blast, leaving the steel bars in several pillars exposed.

 

A Somali woman looks at the damage after the July 26 bombing at Jazeera Palace Hotel.

Pieces of cloth could be seen clinging to the hotel's broken floors, swaying in the wind. Torn wire, plate metal and steel bars were easily visible.

The shock wave from the explosion was so strong that even the top-floor windows on the far side of the hotel had been blown out.

That was not the only damage to nearby buildings. Opposite the hotel, iron sheets were laid on the ground like pieces of hand-rubbed paper, scattered among the debris of concrete and metal.

There were two wheel hubs on the ground, which many people said were left from the car used by the bomber.

Abdimunim Moalim, operations manager for the Jazeera Palace Hotel, tells me that the area around the hotel "where normal people live" had witnessed the most damage.

Standing on a road beside the hotel, I watched as a procession of armed men in various uniforms walked past, as well as some in civilian clothing. Some passed by in pickups, waving and giving me a thumbs-up.

Accompanying this "parade" was not music, however, but the nonstop noise from the machines being used to clean up and reconstruct the site. I had to shout to talk with the people around me.

Behind a temporary wall, which stretched as high as the hotel's first story, workers were busy removing debris, digging, and moving around bags of cement and steel bars. In just days they have transformed the site of a terrorist attack into a bustling construction site.

"This explosion has happened. It was supposed to damage our business," Moalim says. "But I tell you, we will come up much stronger than ever before, and we will be operating as soon as possible."

One of the journalists in our team tells me Moalim had even invited her to stay in the hotel free of charge.

We entered the hotel through a place where the wall should be, and I saw dozens of bags of cement piled there. The canteen on the first floor, which is far away from the blast site and suffered little damage, had four or five customers, including two police officers.

Outside the canteen, I met Ali Mohamed Ahmed, a student who lives in the nearby village of Kaluunka. The 15-year-old says he was playing soccer with 11 friends when the attack happened.

He was eager to talk, but can speak only broken English. Over the noise of the reconstruction work, I heard only one sentence clearly: "When I am big, I want to protect my country."

What he said made me hopeful for the countries affected by terrorism. More youths like Ahmed, as witnesses of the damage terrorism causes, will grow up and shoulder the responsibility to prevent such attacks from happening.

houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

(China Daily Africa Weekly 07/31/2015 page15)

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