The death toll rose to 14 on Saturday from massive bomb blasts outside a Mogadishu hotel and a park that was claimed by Somalia's Shebab Islamists, government and medical sources said.
Eighteen people were wounded in Friday's bombings, two of whom succumbed to their injuries on Saturday, Dr Mohamed Moalim of the Medina hospital in the Somali capital told AFP.
Police on Friday said at least 12 civilians had been killed.
Two loud explosions went off near the popular SYL hotel and neighboring Peace Garden followed by more than an hour of automatic gunfire from 7:45 pm (1645 GMT), an AFP correspondent said.
The hotel and park are close to the top-security Villa Somalia complex that houses the presidential palace and the prime minister's office.
Security Minister Abdirasak Omar Mohamed said the assailants drove a truck packed with 200 kilograms (440 pounds) of explosives to the SYL Hotel.
"The security forces managed to stop the truck at a checkpoint (that the driver) tried to forcefully pass and this effort minimized the casualties it could have inflicted if it was to reach the target," he told a news conference on Saturday.
"It exploded there and a number of people died".
He said it was the biggest blast to hit the city in recent years, more powerful than an attack last July when a suicide bomber rammed a truck full of explosives into the outer wall of the Jazeera Palace Hotel, killing 17 people.
Abdirahman Ahmed, a witness who was inside the hotel at the time, told AFP several people were slightly wounded, including three security guards, "but the gunmen who tried to storm the hotel were killed outside, they could not manage to enter.
"The blast was so huge and windows broken everywhere but the gunfire was outside," he said.
"Everyone was safe inside, but terrified."
The attack is the second in a year to target the SYL hotel, following a suicide bombing there in January 2015 that left five people dead.
Security sources said the blast in the neighboring Peace Garden was also the result of explosives packed into a vehicle, but gave no further details.
The park is popular with Mogadishu residents, especially on Fridays, thanks to its children's playground and cafe terraces.
The Shebab movement claimed responsibility for the attack in a brief statement on its Instagram account.
Forced out of Mogadishu in mid-2011, the Shebab are on a mission to disprove suggestions they are close to defeat and have claimed several spectacular attacks in recent months.
On February 2, the Islamists said they had carried out a bombing that ripped a hole in a passenger jet shortly after take-off from Mogadishu airport, killing the suspected bomber.
The Shebab is fighting to overthrow the internationally-backed government in Mogadishu, which is protected by 22,000 African Union troops.
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