By Reuters
In Summary
- Suspected Al Shabaab militants killed 36 people in a 1am attack Tuesday at a quarry in the Koromei area, northeastern Kenya
Suspected Somali al Shabaab
militants killed at least 36 non-Muslim workers at a quarry in
northeastern Kenya on Tuesday, beheading at least two of them in the
same area that they hijacked a bus and killed 28 passengers just over a
week ago.
Gunmen crept up on dozens of
workers as they slept in tents around the quarry at about 1 am, a
village elder at Korome, near the site of the attack close to the Somali
border, told Reuters.
"The militia separated the
Muslims, then ordered the non-Muslims to lie down where they shot them
on the head at close range," Hassan Duba said.
A witness said most victims were
shot in the head and at least two were beheaded. He counted 36 bodies
at the quarry, about 15 km (10 miles) from the town of Mandera.
Kenya's government confirmed 36 people were killed and cited survivors saying about 20 attackers were involved.
The attack happened just four
hours after three men armed with AK-47 rifles attacked a club in another
northern town of Wajir, shot dead one person and injured 13 others.
The masked attackers raided
Ngamia Club, about 800 metres from the Wajir Police Station, and shot
indiscriminately at the revellers.
The November 23 bus attack took
place on the outskirts of Mandera . The Shabaab militants ordered
non-Muslims off the Nairobi-bound bus and shot them, while sparing
Muslims.
Critics say President Uhuru
Kenyatta has not done enough to secure the nation since al Shabaab
gunmen attacked Nairobi's Westgate shopping mall last year, an assault
that left 67 people dead. A series of other al Shabaab attacks have
followed.
As with past attacks, al Shabaab
militants said they were punishing Kenya for sending troops to join
African peacekeepers battling the Islamists in Somalia. In a statement,
it put the death toll at 40 people and called them "Kenyan crusaders".
"We are uncompromising in our
beliefs, relentless in our pursuit, ruthless against the disbelievers
and we will do whatever necessary to defend our Muslim brethren
suffering from Kenya’s aggression," spokesman Ali Mohamud Rage said.
Opponents of the government say
the presence of Kenyan troops in Somalia has not protected Kenya and so
they should be withdrawn.
Since the Westgate attack, Kenya
has suffered from a string of gun and bomb attacks on the coast, in the
capital Nairobi and along the long and porous northern border with
Somalia.
The government has promised to
step up security, but the public has grown increasingly frustrated and,
after the Mandera bus attack, small protests have been staged demanding
action.
News of the quarry attack sent
the Kenyan shilling lower against the dollar early on Tuesday. The
currency has been under pressure in part because tourism, a major source
of foreign exchange, has been battered by the spate of attacks.
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