Armed Islamists have stormed a hotel in the city of Beledweyne in central Somalia, and a siege is ongoing, police and witnesses have said.
The attack by al-Shabab began with a car bomb exploding, followed by gunmen entering the hotel, leading to intense clashes with security forces.
Police said at least four people had been killed, but witnesses told the BBC the death toll had risen to 10, with the security forces still battling the gunmen at the Qahira Hotel.
Al-Shabab, which is affiliated to al-Qaeda, has been waging a brutal insurgency in Somalia for more than two decades.
The raid on the hotel took place as politicians, security officials and traditional elders were meeting to discuss plans for an offensive against the group in central Somalia.
Beledweyne is about about 335km (208 miles) north of the capital, Mogadishu, and is a strategic location in the campaign against al-Shabab.
Police officer Ali Mahad said many of those in attendance had been rescued, the AFP news agency reports
“Security forces are tackling several gunmen who are cornered in one part of the building,” he is quoted as saying.
Parts of the hotel had been reduced to rubble as government forces and gunmen exchanged fire, shopkeeper Ali Suleiman, who witnessed the attack, told the Reuters news agency.
“We first heard a huge blast followed by gunfire, then another blast was heard,” he said.
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