At least 16 people were killed on Saturday in two suicide attacks against a restaurant and coffee shop in Somalia.
Suicide bombers walked into the two locations in the southwestern city of Baidoa and detonated their vests within minutes of each other, according to witnesses.
The blasts came a day before the first anniversary of a truck bombing that left more than 500 dead in Mogadishu, the worst ever attack in Somalia which was blamed on the extremist al-Shabaab group.
"The number of the dead we have confirmed from the two blasts is 16 and nearly twenty others were wounded some of them seriously, nine people died in the second blast and seven in the first," said Abudulahi Mohamed, a police official in Baidoa.
"The targeted locations are populated by innocent civilians so that all of the victims were civilians, and the number of the dead can increase anytime because of the wounded," he added.
Mohamed Adam, another police official, gave the same toll.
"I saw fifteen dead bodies at the hospital all of them collected from the scene of the attacks, many worried people poured into the hospital looking for their relatives" Abdi Hassan, a relative of a patient who was wounded in the blast.
Al-Shabaab militants claimed responsibility for the twin attacks.
The attacks follow a US airstrike against al Shabaab militants in Haradere, a district in Galmudug region.
The US military's Africa Command said on Saturday it was still assessing the impact of the strike, which was carried out on Friday together with the Somali military.