The story appears on

Page A3

April 4, 2015

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » World

Anger at Kenya’s government as attack death toll set to exceed 147

THE death toll in an assault by Somali militants on a Kenyan university is likely to climb above 147, a government source said yesterday, as anger grew among local residents over what they say was a government failure to prevent bloodshed.

Strapped with explosives, masked al-Shebab gunmen stormed the Garissa University College campus, some 200 kilometers from the Somali border, in a predawn rampage on Thursday.

Tossing grenades and spraying bullets at cowering students, the attackers initially killed indiscriminately. But they later freed some Muslims and instead targeted Christian students during a siege that lasted about 15 hours.

Anger over the massacre was compounded by the fact there were warnings last week that an attack on a university was imminent. Local residents accused the authorities of doing little to boost security in this little-developed region.

“It’s because of laxity by the government that these things are happening. For something like this to happen when there are those rumors is unacceptable,” said Mohamed Salat, 47, a Somali Kenyan businessman.

Officials said almost 150 people died, with at least 79 wounded, many critically. But with an uncertain number of students and staff still missing, the casualties may yet mount.

Outside the university gates, a throng of veiled women clung to the hope that missing people would still turn up alive.

“We are here waiting for news if we can find him, dead or alive,” said Barey Bare, 36, referring to her cousin who worked as a clerk at the university and is missing.

The violence will heap further pressure on President Uhuru Kenyatta, who has struggled to stop frequent militant gun and grenade attacks that have dented Kenya’s image abroad and brought the country’s vital tourism industry to its knees.

More than 400 people have been killed by al-Qaida-allied al-Shebab in the east African nation since Kenyatta took office in April 2013, including 67 people who died in a blitz on a shopping mall in the capital Nairobi in September of that year.

Al-Qaida itself killed some 207 people when it blew up the US embassy in Nairobi in 1998, an attack which remains the single biggest loss of life in Kenya since its independence from Britain in 1963.

Al-Shebab says its recent wave of attacks are retribution for Kenya sending troops into Somalia to fight the group alongside other African Union peacekeepers.

The group, which at one point controlled most of Somalia, has lost swathes of territory in recent years but diplomats have repeatedly warned this has not diminished al-Shebab’s ability to stage guerrilla-style attacks at home and further abroad.

Survivors of the Garissa attack spoke of merciless executions by the attackers, who stalked classrooms and dormitories hunting for non-Muslim students.

Reuben Mwavita, 21, a student, said he saw three female students kneeling in front of the gunmen, begging for mercy.

“The mistake they made was to say ‘Jesus, please save us,’ because that is when they were immediately shot,” Mwavita said.

Many students fled into the sandy scrubland, scaling barbed-wire fences and jumping off buildings, often half-naked, as they were awoken by the sound of gunfire and explosions.

“The attackers were just in the next room. I heard them ask people whether they were Christian or Muslim, then I heard gunshots and screams,” said Susan Kitoko, 24, who broke her hip when she jumped from a first-floor window.

“I don’t know what happened to my two other roommates because I have not heard from them since then,” she said.

Within hours of the attack, Kenya put up a 20 million shillings (US$215,000) reward for the arrest of Mohamed Mohamud, a former Garissa teacher labelled “Most Wanted” in a government poster and linked by Kenyan media to two separate al-Shebab attacks in the neighboring Mandera region last year.




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend