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Uhuru Kenyatta, Kenya's President, |
KENYAN LEADER VOWS TO CRUSH AL-SHABAB.
Uhuru
Kenyatta, Kenya's president, has said the al-Shabab assault that killed 148
people at a university is an "attack on humanity" and vowed
to take harsh measures against what he called "extremists".
Kenyatta also declared three days of national mourning on Saturday, in a televised speech delivered two days after four al-Shabab fighters stormed Garissa University College in the country's east and shot students in their dormitories.
"My administration shall respond in the severest way possible to the attack and any other attack to us," Kenyatta said.
"The time has come for us to be honest with ourselves and indeed each other. The radicalization that breeds terrorism is not conducted in the bush at night. It occurs in the full glare of day in homes, in madras as and in mosques with rogue imams."
Kenyatta also declared three days of national mourning on Saturday, in a televised speech delivered two days after four al-Shabab fighters stormed Garissa University College in the country's east and shot students in their dormitories.
"My administration shall respond in the severest way possible to the attack and any other attack to us," Kenyatta said.
"The time has come for us to be honest with ourselves and indeed each other. The radicalization that breeds terrorism is not conducted in the bush at night. It occurs in the full glare of day in homes, in madras as and in mosques with rogue imams."
Saying the
government needed cooperation from Kenyans to tackle the root of the problem,
Kenyatta ruled out a caliphate by al-Shabab.
The attack in Garissa started at dawn and was the deadliest on Kenyan soil since the 1998 bombing of the US embassy in the capital in Nairobi, which killed more than 200 people.
Kenya's interior ministry said the dead included 142 students, three policemen and three soldiers.
Financiers part of community
The attack in Garissa started at dawn and was the deadliest on Kenyan soil since the 1998 bombing of the US embassy in the capital in Nairobi, which killed more than 200 people.
Kenya's interior ministry said the dead included 142 students, three policemen and three soldiers.
Financiers part of community
Kenyatta
said that the planners and financiers of attacks like the one in Garissa town
are "deeply embedded in our communities".
He said the
government must get the information and cooperation from parents, community
chiefs and political as well as religious leadership to effectively combat
"the terrorists".
"We
must ask the question: Where are the parents and the families of those who are
radicalised, where is the community leadership, where is the political
leadership? Where is the religious leadership?" Kenyatta said.
Kenya has suffered a series of attacks since 2011 when it sent troops to neighbouring Somalia to join African Union forces battling al-Shabab.
The deployment followed a spate of cross-border raids and attacks on Kenyan coastal cities blamed on al-Shabab, which also staged a siege on a shopping mall in Nairobi in September 2013, killing 67 people.
During the attack on Garissa university, non-Muslims were singled out and shot by the assailants.
Kenya has suffered a series of attacks since 2011 when it sent troops to neighbouring Somalia to join African Union forces battling al-Shabab.
The deployment followed a spate of cross-border raids and attacks on Kenyan coastal cities blamed on al-Shabab, which also staged a siege on a shopping mall in Nairobi in September 2013, killing 67 people.
During the attack on Garissa university, non-Muslims were singled out and shot by the assailants.
An
eyewitness of the attack spoke of three female students he saw executed as they
begged for mercy.
Reuben
Mwavita, a 21-year-old student, said the three were kneeling in front of the
gunmen, praying for help.
"The
mistake they made was to say 'Jesus, please save us', because that is when they
were immediately shot,"
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