NAIROBI, Kenya — Somali militants burst into a university in eastern Kenya
on Thursday and killed nearly 150 students in the worst terrorist
attack since the 1998 bombing of the United States Embassy here, laying
bare the nation’s continuing vulnerability after years of battling
Islamist extremism.
A small group of
militants, most likely between four and 10, roved from dorm to dorm,
separating Christian from Muslim students and killing the Christians,
the authorities said. Students described being awakened before dawn by
the sound of gunfire and fleeing for their lives as masked attackers
closed in.
Officials said that by the time Kenyan commandos cornered and killed the attackers on an upper floor, 147 people lay dead.
Despite new security laws,
significant Western help and a heightened state of vigilance that has
already put police officers on almost every major street corner in the
capital, Nairobi, Kenya remains squarely in the cross hairs of the Shabab, the Somali terrorist group that immediately claimed responsibility for the attack on Thursday.
The Shabab has killed hundreds of Kenyans — on country buses, in churches, in remote coastal towns and inside one of Kenya’s fanciest malls
during a devastating siege in 2013 that left 67 people dead and rattled
Kenya’s prized image as a cornerstone of stability in this part of
Africa. The Kenyan government is so desperate to stop the Shabab, one of
the most violent franchises of Al Qaeda, that some officials have even
proposed building a 424-mile wall across the entire Somali border.
Kenya’s tourist industry, one of the pillars of its economy, has been badly damaged
by the terrorist attacks, and the bloodshed on Thursday is sure to make
things worse. There are also fears that the Shabab’s relentless
emphasis on singling out Christians could inflame religious strife in a
country already wrestling with tensions between a Muslim minority, which
has complained about government persecution, and a Christian majority
that increasingly feels under attack.
The
violence Thursday came just days after President Obama announced that he
would visit Kenya in July, his first trip to his father’s homeland
since taking office. Mr. Obama had stayed away until now, at least in
part out of concerns about Kenya’s public safety.
The
White House issued a statement condemning the attack and vowing to
continue assisting Kenya in fighting the Shabab — in recent months, the
American military has killed the group’s leader and other operatives — but it offered no indication of whether the university siege would change Mr. Obama’s travel plans.
The Kenyan authorities said that around dawn,
the attackers stormed Garissa University College in the town of Garissa,
about 90 miles from the Somali border. Though the college is in a
predominantly ethnic Somali area of Kenya, it attracts students from
across the country, many of them non-Muslim.
In
a statement early on Thursday, the Shabab said that its fighters had
attacked the university early in the morning, separating Muslims from
non-Muslims in an “operation against the infidels.”
In
an audio message soon after, a Shabab spokesman, Ali Mohamoud Raghe,
said the attack had been carried out because “the Christian government
of Kenya has invaded our country,” a reference to the Kenyan military’s
2011 incursion into Somalia to oust the Shabab from its strongholds.
He
said the university had been targeted because it was educating many
Christian students in “a Muslim land under colony,” a reference to the
large Somali population in a part of Kenya that Somalia once tried to
claim. He called the university part of Kenya’s “plan to spread their
Christianity and infidelity.”
President Uhuru Kenyatta vowed to crack down on
terrorists, and on Thursday, he abruptly ordered 10,000 police recruits
to report to duty despite a court order saying the recruits may have
been selected through corrupt practices. Human rights observers have
said that Mr. Kenyatta is trying to consolidate control and using the
fear of terrorism to quash civil rights.
On
Thursday, panicked students streamed out of the besieged university with
chilling stories of witnessing their classmates’ being killed.
Augustine Alanga, 21, an economics student, said he had been asleep in
his dormitory when the shooting began. He said he bolted from his room
without stopping to put on his shoes, cutting his feet as he sprinted
barefoot across the campus and into a nearby forest.
“When
I looked back, I saw them,” Mr. Alanga recalled. “There were five or
six of them. They were masked. And they were shooting live rounds.”
The authorities said the attack began when the gunmen killed two guards standing by the main gate of the university.
Police officers nearby “heard the gunshots and responded swiftly, and
engaged the gunmen in a fierce shootout; however, the attackers
retreated and gained entry into the hostels,” a police statement said.
“Security agencies arrived and are currently engaged in an elaborate
process of flushing out the gunmen.”
The police surrounded and sealed off the campus,
and by 11 a.m., three of the college’s four student dormitories had
been evacuated, while “the attackers have been cornered in one hostel,” the Interior Ministry said on Twitter. It was unclear whether any bystanders had been killed by the security forces.
Kenya’s struggles with the Shabab have been going on for years. In late 2011, citing a string of attacks and kidnappings, the Kenyan military charged across the border into Somalia, sending troops, tanks and aircraft to fight the Shabab.
The military later acknowledged that the invasion had been planned well in advance,
part of an effort to protect Kenya’s borders from the violence in
Somalia and to safeguard Kenya’s economic interests, including a huge
port to be built just 60 miles south of Somalia.
The incursion managed to dislodge the Shabab
from vital positions, but instead of pushing the Shabab threat farther
from Kenya, it did the opposite: It brought more Shabab in.
The
Shabab’s attacks on Kenya since 2011 have grown in scope and lethality.
Many people thought it could not get worse than the siege on the
Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi, a gleaming symbol of Kenya’s
modernity, wealth and relative peace. But the attack on Thursday was by
far the deadliest in Kenya since agents of Al Qaeda blew up the United
States Embassy in Nairobi in 1998, killing more than 200, the vast
majority of them Kenyans.
The Shabab began
trying to affiliate with Al Qaeda as early as 2009, but Osama bin Laden
kept them at arm’s length when he was alive, and internal documents have revealed that he was uneasy
about the group’s murderous tactics, including the indiscriminate
killing of Muslim civilians. The Shabab did not become an official
branch of Al Qaeda until February 2012, almost a year after Bin Laden’s
death.
Since then, the group has maintained that
it tries to minimize Muslim casualties, though Muslims continue to be
targets in many of its operations. During the shopping mall attack,
gunmen separated Muslim from non-Muslim civilians by asking religious
trivia questions. (“What is the name of the Prophet’s mother?” “What is
the name of his first wife?”) The “nonbelievers” were killed on the
spot.
In a Shabab document that was found in Mali
by The Associated Press, the group tried to justify its tactics, saying
that “all Muslims must stay far away from the enemy and their
installations so as not to become human shields for them,” and that
there was “no excuse for those who live or mingle with the enemies.”
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