A terrorist attack carried out at a Kenyan college
campus has ended with 147 students killed, the country's interior ministry
says. At least 79 others were wounded after
Al Shabaab gunmen stormed the Moi campus at Garissa University College near the
border with Somalia, authorities said.
"587
students have been evacuated from Garissa University College, 79 injured. All
students have been accounted for," The Kenya National Disaster Operation
Centre said on Twitter. Speaking to reporters in Garissa, interior minister
Joseph Nkaissery did not specify precisely how many students, staff or security
personnel had died but said four Al Shabaab fighters were killed.
One
other suspected gunman was also captured while trying to flee the scene,
officials said. Somali Islamist group Al Shabaab claimed responsibility for the
attack seven hours after firing on the college campus, and said it was holding
Christian hostages inside.
There were reports some people ran the wrong way into the direction of the terrorists while others hid in fields and inside the campus for hours. The gunmen reportedly asked people if they were Muslim or Christian.
The Muslims
were reportedly let go, while those who said they were Christian were either
killed on the spot or taken hostage — similar to what happened in the Al Shabaab attack on Nairobi's
Westgate mall 18 months ago.
Many of the people wounded were hit by gunfire and four
were airlifted to Nairobi for treatment, the country's National Disaster
Operation Centre (NDOC) said. Some students have also been taken to a
government facility in Garissa to be transported back to their homes tomorrow. The
bodies of those killed have already begun to be transported to the country's
capital, Nairobi.
The Department of Foreign Affairs said there were no
Australians registered as being in Kenya's east. The Australian High Commission
in Nairobi was trying to determine whether any Australians had been affected by
the attacks.
There were suggestions from the international community
and from the intelligence community that an attack was imminent in Kenya. Both
the Australian Government and the British government updated their travel
advice last week and suggested they did have intelligence an attack was being
planned.
While
that intelligence was not specific enough to pinpoint Garissa University
College, Garissa is known to be home to a large population of Somali Kenyans
and the area has been the target of similar attacks in the past, including the
2013 attack on an upscale shopping mall in the capital Nairobi.
The Islamist group claims to carry out attacks in Kenya
because Kenyan troops are a part of an African union mission to try to bring
stability to Somalia and have helped drive Al Shabaab out of a number of major
built-up areas in the country.
Last month Garissa University College's chief security
officer informed the campus it was a target and that Al Qaeda-linked Al Shabaab
was planning an attack. Grace Kai, a student at the Garissa Teachers Training
College near the university, said there had been warnings that an attack in the
town could be imminent.
"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."
Authorities
have offered a 20 million shilling ($285,500) reward for information leading to
the arrest of a man called Mohamed Mohamud, described as the "most
wanted" and linked to the attack.
Related posts at following links:
Al Shabaab: Somali Muslim Terrorists
Related posts at following links:
Al Shabaab: Somali Muslim Terrorists