Minnesota's Somali-American community is once again reeling at reports that a suicide bomber in Somalia may have been one of their own.
Al-Shabab, a terrorist group battling for control of the war-torn East African nation, is claiming that the bomber who killed himself and three others in a Monday attack in Mogadishu was Abdullahi Ahmed, 25, who left Minnesota two years ago.
Ahmed would become the third Somali-American -- and the second Minnesotan -- believed to have carried out a suicide bombing.
"It's really bad," said Saeed Fahia, head of the Confederation of Somali Community. "I never thought someone from here would be doing that again. Everyone's saying, 'Not again.'"
Since 2007, more than 20 young Somali-American men have left the Twin Cities to fight in the ongoing civil war.
Federal authorities believe they were radicalized and recruited by Al-Shabab, which the U.S. government claims has links to Al-Qaida. The exodus has put Minnesota at the epicenter of one of the largest counterterrorism probes since the 9/11 attacks.
FBI officials said Thursday they had not yet confirmed the bomber's identity and were sending a team to help determine who he was.
"We have agents overseas working with our partners overseas and will try to identify him," said Steve Warfield, an FBI spokesman. "He may or may not be from Minnesota."