<p> At least four people were killed and 10 wounded when a car bomb exploded close to a checkpoint near Somalia's parliament in the capital Mogadishu on Wednesday, police said.</p>.<p>A plume of thick black smoke was seen over the city and witnesses said a number of vehicles were on fire.</p>.<p>Islamist group Al-Shabaab claimed the attack, after a spike in activity in recent days by the Al-Qaeda linked group which has seen it inflict mass casualties in Somalia and attack a US military base in Kenya.</p>.<p>"Explosives were packed in a vehicle which the security forces think was trying to pass through the checkpoint but because he could not do that, the suicide bomber detonated it," said police officer Adan Abdullahi.</p>.<p>"Initial reports we have received indicate four people were killed and more than 10 others were wounded in the blast."</p>.<p>Abdirahman Mohamed, who was at a nearby grocery store when the blast occurred, said he saw several dead bodies.</p>.<p>"I saw the dead bodies of several people some of them killed by shrapnel inside their vehicles. There was chaos... and ambulances reached the scene soon after the blast," he said.</p>.<p>Shamso Ali, another witness, described "smoke and chaos along the road, the blast was very heavy".</p>.<p>"Thanks to God I was a distance away but I saw the smoke and several vehicles caught on fire," he said.</p>.<p>Mogadishu is regularly hit by attacks by Al-Shabaab, which has fought for more than a decade to topple the Somali government.</p>.<p>The powerful blast comes after Al-Shabaab claimed a massive car bombing in Mogadishu on December 28 that killed 81 people.</p>.<p>The attack hit a busy checkpoint in the southwest of the city, leaving vehicles charred and twisted at a crossroads in the deadliest assault in two years in the Horn of Africa country. Scores more were wounded.</p>.<p>Al-Shabaab has also managed to expand its network in the region, especially in Kenya which has suffered several devastating attacks in retaliation for it sending troops into Somalia in 2011.</p>.<p>On Sunday, three US citizens died and several aircraft and military vehicles were destroyed when Al-Shabaab stormed a military base in Kenya's coastal Lamu region.</p>.<p>Also Sunday, just hours after the attack, police arrested three men who tried to force their way into a British military training camp in the central Kenyan town of Nanyuki.</p>.<p>The Al-Qaeda-linked group has in the past carried out bloody sieges against civilians in Kenya, such as the upmarket Westgate Mall in 2013 and Garissa University in 2015.</p>.<p>The uptick in attacks comes almost a year since the January 15 siege on an upscale Nairobi hotel which left 21 people dead.</p>.<p>In recent statements, Al-Shabaab has referred to an increase in US military air strikes under President Donald Trump, accusing Washington of killing innocent civilians.</p>.<p>AFRICOM said in April it had killed more than 800 people in 110 strikes in Somalia since April 2017.</p>
<p> At least four people were killed and 10 wounded when a car bomb exploded close to a checkpoint near Somalia's parliament in the capital Mogadishu on Wednesday, police said.</p>.<p>A plume of thick black smoke was seen over the city and witnesses said a number of vehicles were on fire.</p>.<p>Islamist group Al-Shabaab claimed the attack, after a spike in activity in recent days by the Al-Qaeda linked group which has seen it inflict mass casualties in Somalia and attack a US military base in Kenya.</p>.<p>"Explosives were packed in a vehicle which the security forces think was trying to pass through the checkpoint but because he could not do that, the suicide bomber detonated it," said police officer Adan Abdullahi.</p>.<p>"Initial reports we have received indicate four people were killed and more than 10 others were wounded in the blast."</p>.<p>Abdirahman Mohamed, who was at a nearby grocery store when the blast occurred, said he saw several dead bodies.</p>.<p>"I saw the dead bodies of several people some of them killed by shrapnel inside their vehicles. There was chaos... and ambulances reached the scene soon after the blast," he said.</p>.<p>Shamso Ali, another witness, described "smoke and chaos along the road, the blast was very heavy".</p>.<p>"Thanks to God I was a distance away but I saw the smoke and several vehicles caught on fire," he said.</p>.<p>Mogadishu is regularly hit by attacks by Al-Shabaab, which has fought for more than a decade to topple the Somali government.</p>.<p>The powerful blast comes after Al-Shabaab claimed a massive car bombing in Mogadishu on December 28 that killed 81 people.</p>.<p>The attack hit a busy checkpoint in the southwest of the city, leaving vehicles charred and twisted at a crossroads in the deadliest assault in two years in the Horn of Africa country. Scores more were wounded.</p>.<p>Al-Shabaab has also managed to expand its network in the region, especially in Kenya which has suffered several devastating attacks in retaliation for it sending troops into Somalia in 2011.</p>.<p>On Sunday, three US citizens died and several aircraft and military vehicles were destroyed when Al-Shabaab stormed a military base in Kenya's coastal Lamu region.</p>.<p>Also Sunday, just hours after the attack, police arrested three men who tried to force their way into a British military training camp in the central Kenyan town of Nanyuki.</p>.<p>The Al-Qaeda-linked group has in the past carried out bloody sieges against civilians in Kenya, such as the upmarket Westgate Mall in 2013 and Garissa University in 2015.</p>.<p>The uptick in attacks comes almost a year since the January 15 siege on an upscale Nairobi hotel which left 21 people dead.</p>.<p>In recent statements, Al-Shabaab has referred to an increase in US military air strikes under President Donald Trump, accusing Washington of killing innocent civilians.</p>.<p>AFRICOM said in April it had killed more than 800 people in 110 strikes in Somalia since April 2017.</p>