No fewer than 147
people have been killed after an Islamic group stormed a university in eastern
Kenya, the country’s interior minister said.
This is just as
the President of Nigeria, Goodluck Jonathan condemned the attack and
commiserated with the families of the victims.
Sky News reports that two police officers are among the dead
following heavy gunfire and explosions in a campus building at Garissa
University.
At least 79 others
have been wounded.
Interior minister
Joseph Nkaissery claimed the siege was almost over.
“We are mopping up
the area,” he told reporters.
Somalia’s al
Shabaab militant group has claimed responsibility for the pre-dawn attack.
“We sorted people
out and released the Muslims,” said spokesman, Sheikh Abdiasis Abu Musab.
“There are many
dead bodies of Christians inside the building. We are also holding many
Christians alive. Fighting still goes on inside the college,” he added.
Two of the militants
have been killed and one arrested as he tried to flee, according to Kenya’s
interior ministry.
The Red Cross
counted 50 students that had been safely freed, while the interior ministry
said 500 of 815 students had been accounted for.
Student Michael Bwana,
who managed to flee, said most of the hostages were girls.
Kenya Police Chief
Joseph Boinet told reporters that gunmen forced their way into the university
at 5.30am by shooting at the guards manning the main gate.
“The gunmen shot
indiscriminately while inside the university compound,” he said.
“Police… engaged
the gunmen in a fierce shootout; however, the attackers retreated and gained
entry into one of the hostels.”
A gunfight between
security services and the perpetrators lasted several hours, according to the
Red Cross.
The area has been
sealed off and the army called in to try and “flush out” the attackers.
Students reported
seeing five masked gunmen.
The authorities
have offered a $215,000 (£145,000) reward for a man called Mohamed Mohamud, who
has been linked to the attack.
Collins Wetangula,
the vice chairman of the student union, said he was preparing to take a shower
when he heard gunshots coming from a dorm.
“All I could hear
were footsteps and gunshots; nobody was screaming because they thought this
would lead the gunmen to know where they are,” he said.
“The gunmen were
saying sisi ni al-Shabab (Swahili for we are al-Shabab).
“If you were a
Christian you were shot on the spot. With each blast of the gun I thought I was
going to die.”
Grace Kai, a
student at a neighbouring college, said there had been warnings of an imminent
attack.
“Some strangers
had been spotted in Garissa town and were suspected to be terrorists,” she
said.
“Then on Monday our
college principal told us… that strangers had been spotted in our college. On
Tuesday we were released to go home, and our college closed, but the campus
remained in session, and now they have been attacked.”
Kenya’s northern
and eastern regions, which border Somalia, have been most affected by attacks
blamed on al Shabaab Islamists from Somalia.
The militants, who
have links to al Qaeda, have vowed to take retribution against Kenya for
sending its troops to Somalia.
Al Shabaab was
responsible for the deadly attack in 2013 on the Westgate shopping mall. At
least 67 people were killed when a group of gunmen rampaged through the centre
in Nairobi.
On the latest
raid, Kenya’s President Uhuru Kenyatta said: “I extend condolences to the
families of those who have perished in this attack. We continue to pray for the
quick recovery of the injured, and the safe rescue of those held hostage.”
He added that
10,000 police recruits would be fast-tracked following the attack.
Meanwhile,
President Goodluck Jonathan on Thursday commiserated with the government and
people of Kenya as well the families of those who died in the terrorist attack.
In a statement by
his spokesman, Reuben Abati, the President condemned what he called deliberate
targeting of innocent persons, schools and other soft targets by terrorists.
He said such
barbaric acts of violence ought to have no place in any civilised society.
The statement
added, “The President assures President Uhuru Kenyatta and the brotherly people
of Kenya that Nigeria stands in full solidarity with them as they come to grips
once again with the aftermath of another heinous terrorist attack on their
country.
“Nigeria,
President Jonathan affirms, will continue to work with Kenya, other African
countries and the international community to rid the world of all terrorist
groups.
“The President
believes that the attack on the Kenyan University and other similar atrocities
across the world must strengthen and solidify the resolve of the global
community to take more urgent and co-ordinated actions to speedily defeat the
agents of global terror.”
Terrorists kill 147 in Kenyan university • Jonathan condemns attack
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Friday, April 03, 2015
Rating:

No comments: