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Monday, September 23, 2013

Nationalities of Kenya shopping mall gunmen unknown






NAIROBI —Kenyan security forces on Monday seized control of a luxury shopping mall that had been attacked by Islamist militants, but officials said some assailants remained hidden inside stores in the mall and little was known about who staged the brazen attack and what countries they came from.

A total of 62 people were killed after the gunmen, from the Islamist al-Shabab militia, burst into the Westgate Premier Shopping mall at lunchtime Saturday and began shooting, said Joseph Ole Lenku, a senior official with the Interior Ministry.
The Kenyan Red Cross earlier estimated the death toll at 69, but on Monday revised the toll to 62, saying some bodies had been double-counted, the Associated Press reported. Sixty-three people remain missing, according to the Kenyan Red Cross, and 175 people were injured.

Loud explosions and sporadic bursts of gunfire could be heard coming from the mall at midday, and large plumes of smoke rose from the area.

Lenku told reporters that “almost all of the hostages have been evacuated,” and the Interior Ministry said that three of the estimated 10 to 15 militants were killed in the standoff. Ten members of the security forces were injured. The smoke billowing from the mall, Lenku added, was caused by the militants, who set fire to the Nakumatt supermarket as a tactical diversion “to distract our activities.”
“Our resolve to defend our country has never been higher,” Lenku said. “We will take the war to the criminals’ doorstep.”

Gen Julius Karangi, the chief of the Kenyan Defense Forces, said the jihadists inside the mall are “clearly a multi-national collection from all over the world” — though he did not offer details. Added Karangi: “We are fighting global terrorism here.”

But the nationalities of the attackers remained unknown. A Twitter posting on Sunday that was purportedly from al-Shabab described several of the attackers as Americans, but the militant group said Monday — in a different tweet — that it had not sent the earlier message and had not released the names or any other details about the individuals involved in the attack.

The later tweet was verified by the SITE Monitoring Service, which tracks statements by extremist groups.

A senior State Department official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said officials were checking the initial report, that Americans were among the attackers, but had not been able to confirm it.

The well-organized assault on a place that is considered an oasis of luxury for Western expatriates and Nairobi’s wealthier residents stunned Kenya, which has one of the continent’s biggest economies and has been a major hub for U.S. military and humanitarian activity in East Africa. It offered sobering proof of the resiliency of one of Africa’s most brutal insurgent groups.

The attack began around lunchtime Saturday. It seemed certain to impact Kenya’s all-important tourism industry and spread unease among the numerous Western aid agencies based in Nairobi.

The dead included numerous foreigners from Britain, France, Canada, Australia and other countries. While no Americans were reported killed, Ruhila Adatia-Sood, the wife of Ketan Sood, a Foreign Service national working for the U.S. Agency for International Development in Nairobi, was among the dead, USAID said in a statement. Five American citizens were wounded, U.S. officials said.

In a nationally televised news conference on Sunday, Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta said that one of his nephews had been inside the mall and was killed in the attack, along with his fiancee.

In numerous tweets from a Twitter handle that was later disabled, al-Shabab declared that the attack was carried out in revenge for Kenya sending troops to fight in neighboring Somalia and said that the group was shifting the battleground to Kenya.

At Nairobi’s Aga Khan University Hospital on Sunday, survivors spoke about how they escaped death in the mall. One British man said his wife and children were hiding behind a meat counter in a store with other women and children. The gunmen sprayed bullets at them, killing a woman and a teenage girl, and wounding his wife, said the man, who asked that neither his nor his spouse’s name be used because they feared retribution. His wife lay in a hospital bed and declined to speak.

The gunmen, the man said, released the children who were still alive and informed his injured wife that she, too, could leave if she converted to Islam, making her recite the Shahada, Islam’s basic profession of belief.

Then the gunmen handed chocolates to the children as they left the mall, the man said.

In a nearby bed, Aquilah Kauser Ishaq, 32, a marketing manager for a local radio station, was nursing wounds from a grenade attack. She was on the top floor when she and her friends heard explosions. Outside in the parking lot, kids were taking part in a cooking class when the gunmen began firing randomly in their direction. “They actually targeted the kids,” Ishaq said. “There was a brother and sister running away. They were shot dead in front of us.”

Then a grenade landed by her foot. A friend pushed her out of the way, but the shrapnel struck her legs and back. The grenade struck a boy and she watched him die, she said. “I even wonder how I am here now,” she said.

The assault was the deadliest in Kenya since al-Qaeda operatives masterminded the twin bombings of the U.S. embassies in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, in 1998.

Al-Shabab also staged the twin bombings in Kampala, Uganda, during the soccer World Cup in July 2010, killing more than 70 people. That attack, the militia said, was in retaliation for Uganda sending its troops to Somalia to support its Western-backed government.

But since mid-2011, al-Shabab has been on its heels, after an offensive by African Union forces backed by the United States and other Western governments. While it remains in control of large swaths of southern Somalia’s countryside, the militia has been riven by a struggle within its core leadership.

In Kenya, the militia has staged small attacks on local targets such as bus stations and churches, killing a handful of people, since the government sent troops to Somalia in October 2011. But Saturday’s attack suggested far greater operational planning and tactical sophistication, analysts said.

“The attack is more likely to be a first salvo of a reinvigorated al-Shabab than the last gasp of a defeated organization,” said J. Peter Pham, head of the Africa Center at the Atlantic Council. “While there have been divisions within and defections from al-Shabab, my sense is that the hard-core element will actually emerge more nimble and lethal as a result of shedding those elements.”

The attack on the mall, he said, would have required a local unit to conduct reconnaissance and plan other details, suggesting that the militia has an “extensive support network” in Kenya.

Targeting the mall, Pham said, sends a “much clearer signal of the group’s resurgence, both to al-Qaeda central and other regional affiliates and to audiences from which it will now, undoubtedly, try to recruit.”

Abdi Aynte, a Somali analyst, said al-Shabab wants to “shift the front lines of the war from inside Somalia to the heart of Kenya” and trigger a public debate about the “viability” of Kenya’s intervention in Somalia.

Not all terrorism experts agreed that the attack showed al-Shabab’s strength. Juan Cole, a professor at the University of Michigan, wrote in a blog that the attack was “the act of a declining political movement that has lost enormous ground in recent years” and is “on its way to oblivion.”

Bruce Hoffman, a counterterrorism expert at Georgetown University, said a reemergence of al-Shabab could place new strain on U.S. intelligence and counterterrorism agencies, which have shifted resources to places such as Syria, Egypt and Mali.

“Renewed al-Qaeda-generated instability in East Africa is the last thing we need right now,” Hoffman said. “We can keep hoping that the war on terrorism and the struggle against al-Qaeda is over, but it isn’t. It’s the monster that keeps rising from the grave.”

Miller reported from Washington. Craig Whitlock, Anne Gearan, Ernesto Londoño, Julie Tate and Debbi Wilgoren in Washington contributed to this report.

Lawmakers: Kenya Attack Shows Sophistication of Terrorists



By Jamila Trindle and Kristina Peterson

WASHINGTON—Lawmakers said Sunday that the ongoing terrorist siege of a shopping center in Kenya was a sophisticated attack that showed terror groups are continuing a strategy of going after “soft targets.”

“This is a very sophisticated attack, very similar to what we saw in Mumbai,” Rep. Peter King (R., N.Y.) said on ABC’s “This Week.” In the Indian city, more than 160 people were killed in 2008 in about a dozen coordinated attacks.

In Kenya, the gunmen are still holding people hostage in a shopping mall in Nairobi as the siege, which has already resulted in 59 deaths, goes into its second day.

Mr. King said the terror group that has claimed responsibility for the attack, Somalia’s al-Shabaab militant group, is an “extremely deadly organization” that is “very well trained.”

The group is “one of the only al Qaeda affiliates that has actively recruited here in the United States,” said Mr. King, who is chairman of a House counterterrorism and intelligence subcommittee.  He said he assumed the FBI would be looking into Somali-American communities in the U.S. to make sure there is no threat of a follow-up attempt.

Frances Townsend, former homeland security advisor to President George W. Bush, said U.S. officials are likely scrutinizing Somali-Americans recruited by the group.  She said more than half of the 40 to 50 Somali-Americans recruited by al-Shabaab come from Minnesota, so law enforcement officials are likely focusing their efforts there.

“Were any of them involved in this attack, and what is the FBI doing to identify potential threats to this country?” Ms. Townsend said.

Mr. King said the attack shows the growing influence of al Qaeda in Africa.

“We’re talking about a very significant terrorist group here showing a capacity to attack outside their borders,” Mr. King said.

Sen. Tom Coburn (R., Okla.), the senior Republican on the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, said that the attack was a sign that al Qaeda is on the rise.

“This is another indication that soft targets is where al Qaeda is going, and they’re not on the decline,” Mr. Coburn said on CBS’s “Face the Nation.”

American man escapes terror siege on Kenya's Westgate Mall with pregnant wife, toddler daughter: report




Nick Handler, a Pennsylvania native who works at a farming NGO in Kenya, hid in a storage room with around 40 others, including his 2-year-old daughter, on Saturday as gunman carried out a massacre at the high-end shopping mall.

Nick Handler lives in Kenya, with his wife, Lyndsay, and 2-year-old daughter, Julia. The family was shopping Saturday at the Westgate Mall in Nairobi when gunman stormed inside.

An American NGO worker living in Kenya was caught in the terror attack over the weekend with his pregnant wife and toddler daughter, but all three managed to make it out alive.

Nick Handler, a Pennsylvania native who works at a farming NGO in Kenya, told ABC News he was at a cafe Saturday in the Westgate Mall in Nairobi with his 2-year-old daughter, Julia, when the siege began.

"All of a sudden I just heard a loud explosion followed by a few gunshots, and I just immediately just grabbed her and luckily it was right by the door and we were able to sprint out of the cafe and ran across the mall," Handler told ABC News.

Nick Handler/via Facebook-  'All of a sudden I just heard a loud explosion followed by a few gunshots and I just immediately just grabbed her and luckily it was right by the door and we were able to sprint out of the cafe and ran across the mall,' said Handler, who was at a cafe with his 2-year-old.

Meanwhile, his wife, Lyndsay, who is 8 months pregnant, had been shopping on another floor, and the family became separated.

"That was just the most terrifying thing for her, just not being able to be with us and having no idea what was happening," Handlers said.

For 90 excruciating minutes, Handler and the other mallgoers hid out as the Al Qaeda-affiliated gunmen carried out a massacre at the four-story shopping center.

The latest reports said at least 68 people were killed, with more than 175 wounded.
GORAN TOMASEVIC/REUTERS - Shoppers scramble for safety as police hunt for the gunmen on Saturday. At least 68 people have been killed, and 175 reportedly injured.
The fighting flared again Monday, and there were reports of gunshots and loud explosions.

An unknown number of hostages were reportedly still being held inside. 

At one point, Handler said, a group of people left the storage room but then came running back inside.

He feared they'd been discovered, and that the gunmen would soon burst through the door.

GORAN TOMASEVIC/REUTERS - Armed police guide a woman and a child to safety. Fighting at the mall reportedly flared again Monday, hours after the Kenyan military reported that most of the hostages had been rescued. 

 "Aside from that initial explosion, this was probably the most terrifying moment, not knowing if perhaps the people who had left had encountered some of the attackers who were then coming into the area that we were hiding," Handler told ABC News.

Eventually, the group was rescued by Kenya police and taken to safety. 

His wife, who had been hiding in a movie theater, also escaped unhurt.

Handler described their shell-shocked, emotional reunion outside.
STRINGER/REUTERS - Civilians escape an area of the mall Saturday during an attack by an Al Qaeda-affiliated group that claimed responsibility.
"Just the look on her face, the emotion and I think all of the fear and the uncertainty that had been building up. She just let it all out. It was a pretty emotional moment for all of us," he said.

At least five U.S. citizens were reportedly wounded in the three-day siege at the high-end shopping mall.

There have been no reports of Americans killed, though it was reported that the wife of a non-U.S. citizen working for the U.S. Agency for International Development was killed.

Her identity was not released.

With News Wire Services


Africa Assaults Show Common, Brutal Goals


Al Qaeda-Linked Strikes Target Foreign Civilians, Cite Revenge on Anti-Insurgent Nations; 'Potential for Mutual Inspiration'

 
Assaults across Africa by al Qaeda-backed gunmen over the past year have pointed to a crude but devastating tactic taking hold on the continent: killing civilians.

From Nigeria in the west, to Algeria in the north, and Somalia in the east, local allies of al Qaeda have launched attacks that share the same fluid and ruthless style. Roving gunmen have killed gas workers in Algeria, villagers in Nigeria, and now, shoppers in Kenya. Conducted by local factions thousands of miles away from one another, the attacks have achieved a common goal of mass carnage.

Associated Press

Algerian firemen in January carried a coffin holding a victim killed during the gas-facility siege at In Amenas.

On Sunday, the standoff in a Nairobi shopping mall between Kenyan security forces and militants stretched into a second day, with the government saying gunmen had slain at least 68 people and injured more than 175; more than 1,000 escaped the mall after Saturday's assault on the lunchtime crowd. On Sunday evening, Kenyan police said they had begun a final push to clear the building.

The insurgency known as al-Shabaab claimed responsibility for the attack, via Twitter. It was seen in part as revenge for Kenya's role last year in dispatching peacekeepers to drive the terrorist group out of Somalia's capital, Mogadishu.

U.S. foreign-policy experts said the Nairobi attack reasserted al-Shabaab's capabilities at a time many thought its power had been diminishing.

"There's been this tendency to predict the demise of al Qaeda, whether it's in Pakistan, Somalia or other locations, and they have demonstrated an ability to regenerate and conduct attacks when it is in their interest," said Seth Jones, an al Qaeda specialist at Rand Corp.

The attack was in keeping with the types of strikes the group has mounted by hitting a target that would have a higher proportion of foreigners and would do economic harm to the country, a U.S. official said, much like the groups' other attacks on restaurants and nightclubs.

The suspected militants appear to have exposed security weaknesses in Kenya. The attacks suggest insurgents are learning from one another—if not yet coordinating attacks—and punctures the myth that al Qaeda's Africa franchises are fragmented and isolated, said Paul-Simon Handy, research director of the Institute for Security Studies in Pretoria. "What is new here is the potential for mutual inspiration," he said. "This isn't a fiction anymore."

In a brief speech on Sunday, as helicopters and planes roared overhead,Kenya's president, Uhuru Kenyatta, said the attack was international in nature. In addition to the scores of Kenyan victims, several foreign nationals died. They included three Britons, two Canadians and two French women—a mother and a daughter—who were executed in the mall's parking lot, the government said.

"This is an incident of terror, an incident that can happen in any city, in any capital anywhere in the world," Mr. Kenyatta said. "This is an international war. And we need to join hands and work together to see it effectively destroyed."

The U.S. government over the weekend pledged military, diplomatic and law-enforcement assistance to the Kenyan government. "We basically said: Let us know what you need," a senior U.S. official said.

U.S. officials said on Sunday that the Nairobi attack wasn't necessarily an indicator of a greater threat posed to U.S. interests there. The attack may not signal "any sort of broadening of al-Shabaab's ambitions or a broadening of its goals," a U.S. official said. "It's a continuation of its long-standing battle to weaken the countries Shabaab views as its chief aggressor."

The official said the attack, however, was significant both for its size and its targeting of Westerners. "This isn't about the U.S.," the official said. "It's Westerners."

The Nairobi attack unfolded in the same way as the January hijacking of a gas facility in southern Algeria. A jihadist brigade held more than 800 people hostage at the plant, jointly operated by British firm BP BP -0.38% PLC, Norway's Statoil STL.OS -0.22% ASA and Sonatrach, the Algerian state oil company, for four days, until Algerian forces raided the site. Thirty-seven expatriates died.

"The method is the same," said Pascal Le Pautremat, a professor at Paris-based Institut des Relations Internationales et Stratégiques. "They hit the heart of a country as well as its most remote periphery to spread a sense of insecurity among the population."
The attackers at the Algerian plant called their raid revenge for a French intervention in nearby Mali, in January, against a trio of al Qaeda-allied insurgencies.

Weeks later, Nigerian militants belonging to the group Boko Haram took a French family hostage, again claiming the act as a retributive strike against France. As many as several hundred Boko Haram members had trained in Mali, and analysts said their campaign for Islamic rule across Africa's most-populous nation, which has left thousands dead, bares tactical resemblance to a two-decade-long al Qaeda-backed Islamic uprising in Algeria.

Last week, meanwhile, a shooting spree in the Nigerian village of Benisheik left 87 people dead. Nigeria's military blamed the killings on Boko Haram. Soldiers have cut cellphone service in the area and restricted travel, making it difficult to confirm such reports. In Benisheik, Boko Haram fighters were still popping up on country roads this past weekend, firing at civilians, then dashing back into the surrounding scrubland, said Mohammed Kana , an aid worker with Nigeria's National Emergency Management Agency. At least four people, including a young boy, died in those skirmishes, he said. The Nigerian military had begun to fly warplanes over the area.

In more government-focused assaults, both Somali and Nigerian rebels have bombed administrative buildings and assassinated politicians. Having weakened the state, those insurgencies then turn their guns against the population, said Kwesi Aning, research director at the Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre in Accra, Ghana.

"It's to show that the government is incapable of protecting you," he said.

In the wake of such attacks, governments have responded as they have in the past—bluntly.

Nigeria has declared a state of emergency in its north giving soldiers free rein to detain civilians, enter their homes and block off highways. Meanwhile, Kenyan officials have promised swift justice for the perpetrators of the attack on its Westgate mall, popular with affluent Kenyans and foreign residents in Nairobi.

"We will punish the mastermind swiftly, and indeed, very painfully," said Kenya's President Kenyatta, whose nephew died in the attack.

Crushing displays of military force allowed governments here to quash the ethnic rebellions of the 1960s, back when today's generals and defense chiefs were foot soldiers. Now, those leaders find themselves at the helm of a fight that requires the more complex challenges of protecting civilian populations, said analysts. Some aren't up to the task, said Mr. Aning of the Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre.

"We basically need to change our thinking around fighting terrorism," he said. "Most of our armies and intelligence services are trained in conventional warfare, and they're seeing all these nonconventional demands put on them."

Experts drew parallels between the Nairobi mall shootings and the 2008 attacks in Mumbai, India, both of which deployed automatic assault-style weapons against civilians and held them hostage.

"It's been almost five years since the Mumbai attacks, and everybody's surprised we haven't seen a repeat of that type of operation," said Bruce Hoffman, a Georgetown University professor specializing in al Qaeda. Although terrorists frequently target areas likely to inflict harm on civilians, "what's different and consequential [in Nairobi] is the ease with which this can be done," particularly in a country less experienced in dealing with terrorists, he said.

Experts said very few terrorist groups linked to al Qaeda stick to local attacks as they grow.

"Much like al Qaeda [in the] Arabian Peninsula having gone international very early, we have al-Shabaab going not international, but regional, in an extremely concerning manner, Mr. Hoffman said.

"This was a group that because of their diminishing territorial control in Somalia over the past couple of years was seen by many as on the decline and to be almost a metaphor for the diminishing prospects of al Qaeda," Mr. Hoffman said. The latest incarnation of al-Shabaab "could be more challenging than its predecessor," he said. "One way or another, we're still fighting the war on terrorism."

— Gabriele Parussini in Paris and Kristina Peterson in Washington, D.C. contributed to this article.

Write to Peter Wonacott at peter.wonacott@wsj.com and Drew Hinshaw at drew.hinshaw@dowjones.com

Somaliland wants to be a trading hub. Here are the problems ..and the potential.


 
Photograph: Getty Images


Somaliland, a semi-desert territory on the coast of the Gulf of Aden, has set its sights on becoming a regional trading hub for the Horn of Africa. Though not internationally recognised, Somaliland’s "autonomous" status has insulated it from the turmoil that has subsumed Somali for the past two decades. It has a functioning political system, government institutions, its own currency and relatively low levels of political violence.

At the heart of its economic potential is the port of Berbera, used as an import and export hub by landlocked Ethiopia. Its two airports have undergone a USD 10 million Kuwaiti funded makeover which Somaliland hopes will be the start of efforts to develop its infrastructure, creating the potential for it to augment its position as an alternative trade corridor to Djibouti for Ethiopia.

Ethiopia’s USD 43bn economy, while largely closed to the outside world, is growing by 7 per cent a year and the country is keen to develop coffee and leather manufacturing exports.

The need for enhanced infrastructure in the region is demonstrated by persistent bottlenecks at ports in Mombasa, Dar es Salaam and Djibouti. The appalling condition of the Mombasa road linking the port with the rest of Kenya and the countries of the interior exacerbates the backlog.
Ethiopia’s over reliance on one trade corridor through Djibouti leaves the country vulnerable to fluctuations in its relationship with its trade partner, thereby compromising its ability to effectively manage the political economy of trade logistics. The World Bank has encouraged Addis Ababa to develop transport routes through Somaliland to diversify its options and improve its negotiating position with transit corridors.

Infrastructure development will provide a boost to Somaliland’s fledgling natural resources sector. Sharing the similar geology to the oil rich Gulf states, Somaliland and neighbouring Puntland, offer attractive prospecting opportunities for oil & gas companies. Canadian-listed Africa Oil Corp and Anglo-Turkish oil company Genel Energy, have signed contracts with the semi-autonomous governments and are exploring in the region.

In a situation similar to the standoff between Baghdad and Kirkuk, the activities of international oil companies have sparked controversy over which authorities have the right to issue exploration licences. Following the presidential election in Somalia in 2012, Somalia authorities are reasserting their claim that the issuing of such licences falls solely within the remit of the federal government.
The Somali constitution gives considerable autonomy to regional governments to enter into commercial contracts for oil deals, while a petroleum law, not yet adopted by parliament is being invoked by federal officials in Mogadishu to claim that the central government can distribute natural resources contracts.

The seeds of this controversy dates back to the 1991 overthrow of a dictator that plunged Somalia into two decades of violent turmoil, first at the hands of clan warlords and then Islamist militants, creating a political vacuum in which two semi-autonomous regions - Puntland and Somaliland – emerged in northern Somalia.

Multinational oil companies with licences to explore Somalia prior to 1991 have since seen Somaliland and Puntland grant their own licences for the same blocks. At present the federal government is too weak to press its claim and is unlikely to remain so into the medium term. Any concerted effort to force Somaliland and Puntland to rescind contracts has the potential to provoke violent clashes between armed groups and the security forces in the territories.

Activity by a range of investors in infrastructure development and oil & gas exploration is indicative of the potential to be unlocked in even the most challenging territories. With appropriate insurance coverages providing balance sheet protection against the challenges posed by unpredictable government action and the threat of political violence, opportunities abound for the intrepid investor.

Source: newstatesman.com

More gunfire after Kenyan forces assault Nairobi's Westgate mall




Heavy smoke rises from the Westgate Shopping Mall in Nairobi, Kenya, where hostages were being held for a third day on Monday, September 23. Gunmen burst into the mall and opened fire in a deadly attack on September 21. Terrorists from the Somalia-based Al-Shabaab group were believed to have about 10 remaining hostages on one level of the mall, security officials said.
By Michael Pearson. Zain Verjee and Nima Elbagir, CNN

Nairobi, Kenya (CNN) -- Heavy gunfire sent aid workers and journalists scrambling outside Nairobi's Westgate Shopping Mall on Monday afternoon, more than an hour after a Kenyan government official said security forces had taken full control of the four-story building from terrorists.

It was unclear if any hostages remained inside the building, but authorities expect the number to be "very, very minimal," if any remain, Interior Minister Joseph Ole Lenku said at a news briefing.

Most had already been evacuated, he said Monday, the third day of the siege.

The Kenyan Red Cross said that 62 people had died since the Saturday attack by gunmen from the Somalia-based Al-Shabaab terror group. The agency had previously reported 69 deaths. Some bodies had been counted twice, it said on Twitter.

Dark smoke that rose from the building after Monday's assault was from fires set by the gunmen to distract forces from the assault, Lenku said.

Terrorists appear to be on the run inside the mall, which Lenku said had been sealed off to prevent their escape.
People run for cover outside the mall after heavy shooting started on September 23.
"We are in charge of the situation, our people are safe," he said.

Kenyan authorities have arrested "around four" people on suspicion of involvement in the attack, the Interior Ministry told CNN. The arrests were made at the airport, the agency said on Twitter.

The country's Immigration Department said in a tweet that it had increased security at entry and exit points.

A paramedic runs for cover outside the mall on September 23.
Before the assault, terrorists were believed to have about 10 hostages on one level of the mall, security officials said.


An unspecified number of hostages then were freed overnight, the head of the Kenyan police force said.


Outside the security perimeter around the mall, volunteers waited Monday for their chance to go inside and recover bodies.

At a community center nearby, a distraught woman continued to seek information about her missing husband, a mall employee.

People run for cover outside the mall after heavy shooting started on September 23.
Meanwhile, the FBI was looking into claims by Al-Shabaab of American citizens being involved the attack but has not confirmed the claims, law enforcement officials told CNN.

The siege

The terrorist attack began at midday Saturday, Nairobi time, with an estimated 10 to 15 gunmen. A youth cooking competition was taking place in part of the mall at the time. Two attackers were killed Saturday.

Witnesses said the gunmen went from store to store, shooting people, and then took hostages.

Survivor Bendita Malakia, a North Carolina woman who moved to Nairobi in July, told CNN affiliate WAVY that she took refuge behind the closed metal gates of a store with dozens of others.

"While we were back there, you could hear them methodically going from store to store, talking to people and asking questions," she said. "They were shooting, screaming. Then it would stop for a while and they would go to another store."

Hospital volunteer Abiti Shah told CNN on Monday that witnesses told her the arrival of the gunmen was like "a Hollywood action scene."

"They just started firing in the air," Shah said, retelling the witness accounts.

Al-Shabaab has claimed that the attackers targeted non-Muslims and vowed they would not negotiate for the hostages' lives. CNN security analyst Peter Bergen said the terrorists apparently took hostages only to prolong the siege and win more media attention.

As Kenyan police and military tried to end the standoff in its third day, authorities elsewhere were collecting names and details and planning to track down those in Al-Shabaab behind the attack.

The dead

Most of the dead were said to be Kenyans.

Four British citizens, two French nationals and two Canadians, including a diplomat, also died, their governments said.

Those killed include:

• A 33-year-old Dutch woman, said Friso Vijnen, according to a Dutch Foreign Affairs Ministry official.

• A major African poet, author and Ghanian statesman, Kofi Awoonor, Ghana's president said.

• The nephew of Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta and the man's fiancee.

• A Peruvian doctor, Juan Jesus Ortiz, who had previously worked for the United Nations Fund for Children and lived in Kenya doing consulting work, the country's Foreign Affairs Ministry said.

The wounded

Kenyatta said more than 175 people had been wounded. Five were Americans, the State Department said Sunday.

Elaine Dang, 26, a University of California, Berkeley, graduate from San Diego, underwent surgery to her chest, arms and legs.


"I'm OK, I'm very grateful to be alive," she told CNN affiliate KFMB-TV

She said two friends died in the attack.


Dang, who has worked for humanitarian organizations, now is the general manager for Eat Out Kenya.

She said she hoped Americans would not form negative opinions about Kenya.

"I'm very prideful for the country, and I love Kenyans," she said.

Three injured security forces also were seen being taken out of the mall, but the severity of their injuries was unclear.

The terrorists

Before its Twitter account was suspended, Al-Shabaab issued a list of nine names it said were among the attackers. It said three were from the United States, two from Somalia and one each from Canada, Finland, Kenya and the United Kingdom.

A senior State Department official said that the United States was trying to determine whether any of the attackers were American. While they were still working to verify the claims, authorities said they were becoming more confident that American citizens may be involved.

Federal officials and Somali-American leaders in Minneapolis have reported that Al-Shabaab has recruited young men there to go to Africa to fight.


While senior Kenyan intelligence sources told CNN on Monday that surveillance video from inside the mall appears to show a white woman taking part in the attack, Lenku, the Kenyan interior minister, told reporters that all of the attackers were men.

Some of the terrorists apparently dressed as women, he said.

However, the sources said that the woman is actively involved in the attacks and that they believe she is British.

The report came after earlier speculation that the Al-Shabaab-affiliated "White Widow," Samantha Lewthwaite, may have been involved in the attack.

Lewthwaite's husband, Germaine Lindsey, was one of the suicide bombers killed in the 2005 attack on London's transportation system. His Buckinghamshire-born widow is wanted by Kenyan authorities for her alleged role as an Al-Shabaab and al Qaeda-linked financier.

State House spokesman Manoah Esipisu earlier said that "nothing is being ruled out" when it comes to Lewthwaite's possible involvement.

Such involvement would be "very unusual," said Bergen, the security analyst.

"Typically these groups are misogynist," he said. "Their view is the woman should be in a home and shrouded in a body veil."

The investigation

Lenku said Monday that the effort to roust the terrorists was a Kenyan operation, but government sources told CNN that Israeli special forces also were at the scene.

Kenyatta, the Kenyan president, vowed Sunday to punish those responsible for the attacks.

"They shall not get away with their despicable, beastly acts. Like the cowardly perpetrators now cornered in the building, we will punish the masterminds swiftly and indeed very painfully," he said.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry promised an American investigation.


"Obviously, it's an enormous offense against everybody's sense of right and wrong," Kerry said. "It represents the seriousness and the breadth of the challenge we face with ruthless and completely reckless terrorists, and we're going to pursue them."

The mall siege is the deadliest terror attack in Kenya since al Qaeda blew up the U.S. Embassy there in 1998, killing 213 people.

Al-Shabaab is al Qaeda's proxy in Somalia.

Since Kenya launched attacks against Al-Shabaab in Somalia in 2011, the group has hurled grenades at Kenyan churches, bus stops and other public places.

Last year, the Kenyan military was part of a peacekeeping force that defeated Al-Shabaab forces to liberate the key Somali port of Kismayo.

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Michael Pearson reported and wrote from Atlanta; Zain Verjee and Nima Elbagir reported from Nairobi. CNN's Arwa Damon, Lillian Lesposo, Holly Yan, Greg Botelho, Brian Walker, Jackie Castillo and David Simpson also contributed to this report.

Source: CNN

Sunday, September 22, 2013

LATEST UPDATES: TIRADA DHIMASHADA OO MARAYSA 59 RUUX HALKA DHAAWACU CAGOCAGYNAYSO 157 WEERARKII SHABAAB KU QAADAY XARUNTA DUKAAMAYSIGA NAIROBI MALL


NARIOBI - Wararka ugu dambeeya ee laga helayo magaalada Nariobi ayaa daboolka ka qaaday in tirada dhimashada weerarkii weerarkii shalay ay Al Shabab ku qaaday xarunta dukaamaysiga Nairobi Mall 

Ciidamada ammaanka ee Kenya, ayaa sheegay in ciidamadoodu ay wali wadaan raadinta nimanka wajigu u duuban yahay ee hubaysan ee weerarka ku qaaday xarunta Dukaamada Ganacsiga Westgate ee Nairobi.

Wasiirka Ammaanka ee Dalka Kenya ayaa sheegay in kooxda weerarka soo qaaday ay afduubteen dad.

Al-Shabaab ayaa sheegaty in ay ka danbaysay weerarka. Waxay sheegeen in ay ka jawaabayeen ciidamada Kenya ee ku sugan Somaliya. Al-Shabaab ayaa sheegtay in kooxaha weerarka soo qaaday ay diideen in ay isku dhiibaan ciidamada Kenya.

Ciidanka Kenya ayaa sheegay in uu dhintay mid ka mid ah kooxihii weerarka soo qaaday oo dhaawac isbitaalka loogu qaaday.

AL SHABAAB KILL 39, HOLD HOSTAGES IN NAIROBI MALL


NAIROBI (AFP) – Kenyan troops and Somali militants were locked in a hostage stand-off inside an upmarket Nairobi shopping mall early Sunday, after the Islamist gunmen stormed the complex and massacred 39 people and wounded 150.

Kenyan officials said “major operations” were underway with police and soldiers engaged in an apparent final bid to put an end to the 17-hour-long battle. The Kenyan government said an unknown number of hostages were trapped in several locations in the Westgate mall.

Somalia’s Al Qaeda-inspired Shebab rebels said the carnage at the part Israeli-owned Westgate mall was in direct retaliation for Kenya’s military intervention in Somalia, where African Union troops are battling the Islamists.

Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta said in a televised address to the nation that he had “personally lost family members in the Westgate attack”, but said the country had “overcome terrorist attacks before, and we will defeat them again.”

“Let me make it clear. We shall hunt down the perpetrators wherever they run to. We shall get them. We shall punish them for this heinous crime,” he said, adding: “Terrorism is a philosophy of cowards.”

Kenyan police described the attackers as a well-organised “terror gang” numbering around 10.

The Westgate mall is popular with wealthy Kenyans and expatriates, and was packed with around 1,000 shoppers when the gunmen marched in at midday, tossed grenades and sprayed automatic gunfire.

After hours of sometimes ferocious gun battles, security sources said police and soldiers had finally “pinned down” the gunmen and managed to evacuate hundreds of shoppers and staff.

“The work is continuing, but you cannot rush these things,” said an army officer posted on the perimeter cordon set up around the mall.

“Our teams are there, we are watching and monitoring, we will finish this as soon as we can,” he told AFP.

One teenager recounted to AFP how he played dead to avoid being killed.

“I heard screams and gunshots all over the place. I got scared. I tried to run down the stairs and saw someone running towards the top, I ran back and hid behind one of the cars,” he said from his hospital bed at MP Shah Hospital, where he was nursing burns to his hands and chest.

A spokesman for Shebab said the attack was a response to Kenya’s nearly two-year-old military presence in war-torn Somalia in support of the internationally-backed government.

“We have warned Kenya of that attack but it ignored (us), still forcefully holding our lands… while killing our innocent civilians,” Shebab’s spokesman Sheik Ali Mohamud Rage said in a statement.

“If you want Kenya in peace, it will not happen as long as your boys are in our lands,” the statement said.

The group also issued a string of statements via Twitter.

“The Mujahideen entered #Westgate Mall today at around noon and are still inside the mall, fighting the #Kenyan Kuffar (infidels) inside their own turf,” the group said, before the account was suspended by Twitter.

The rebels said Muslims inside the centre had been “escorted out by the Mujahideen before beginning the attack.”

The gunmen were “holding their ground. All praise is due to Allah!”, the group said.

The attack was the worst in Nairobi since an Al-Qaeda bombing at the US embassy killed more than 200 in 1998.

Shocked people of all ages and races could be seen running away from the mall, some clutching babies, while others crawled along walls to avoid stray bullets.

A shop manager who managed to escape said at one point “it seemed that the shooters had taken control of all the mall”.

“They spoke something that seemed like Arabic or Somali,” said a man who escaped the mall and gave his name only as Jay. “I saw people being executed after being asked to say something.”

Kenyan troops went shop-to-shop inside the shopping centre and were joined by special forces. Foreign security officials — from Israel, the United States and Britain — were also seen at the complex.

An AFPTV reporter said she saw at least 20 people rescued from a toy shop. Dozens of wounded, some of them bleeding children, were taken away from the mall on stretchers.

Police at the scene said a suspect wounded in the firefight had been detained and taken to hospital under armed guard, but that he later died of his injuries.

Kenneth Kerich, who was shopping when the attack happened, also described scenes of utter panic.

“I suddenly heard gunshots and saw everyone running around so we lied down. I saw two people who were lying down and bleeding, I think they were hit by bullets,” he said.

An eyewitness who survived the assault said he saw the body of a child being wheeled out of the mall.

“The gunmen tried to fire at my head but missed. I saw at least 50 people shot,” mall employee Sudjar Singh told AFP.

Vehicles riddled with bullet holes were left abandoned in front of the mall as the Red Cross appealed for blood donations and police instructed Nairobi residents to stay away.

Security agencies have regularly included the Westgate shopping centre on lists of sites they feared could be targeted by Al Qaeda-linked groups.

Paris confirmed that two French citizens were among those killed in what it condemned as a “cowardly” attack. Canada’s Prime Minister Stephen Harper said two Canadians, one of them a diplomat, were also among the dead.

The United States said its citizens were reportedly among those injured and the White House condemned the “despicable” act.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague said that there were “undoubtedly British nationals caught up in this so we should be ready for that”.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon was following the attack “closely and with alarm”, a statement from his office said.

The UN Security Council also condemned “in the strongest possible terms” the attack.

Source: AFP