By By The Citizen Reporters and Agencies
Posted Saturday, September 21 2013 at 23:25
Posted Saturday, September 21 2013 at 23:25
In Summary
Kenyan troops and elite units have joined
police fighting gunmen in Nairobi’s upmarket Westgate shopping mall, an
AFP correspondent at the scene said.Al-Shabab claimed
responsibility for the Westgate Mall attack in its Twitter feed, calling
it a response to Kenya's military presence in Somalia.
Nairobi. Masked gunmen stormed a
teeming upmarket mall in Nairobi yesterday, spraying gunfire that
killed around 39 people before holing themselves up in the complex with
hostages.
In the aftermath of this brutal assault, Islamist
group Al-Shabab claimed responsibility for the attack in its Twitter
feed, calling it a response to Kenya's military presence in Somalia.
The militants, who had threatened to strike the
mall before, further said their attack had claimed more victims than the
numbers indicated by Kenya's security organs.
One message said Al-Shabab had warned the Kenyan
government “that failure to remove its forces from Somalia would have
severe consequences,” reports The New York Times.
Twitter has since suspended the Shabab-linked account, who were tweeting via the handle @HSM_Press.
Kenyan troops and elite units have joined police
fighting gunmen in Nairobi’s upmarket Westgate shopping mall, an AFP
correspondent at the scene said.
Troops could be seen moving around and inside the
shopping centre, where unidentified gunmen launched an assault with
automatic weapons and grenades shortly before midday.
A security source at the scene said Kenyan special
forces were involved in operations to secure the mall and evacuate
trapped staff and shoppers.
Military and police helicopters were also flying
overhead. Police were going shop-to-shop to evacuate terrified people
from the Westgate shopping mall, which is popular with wealthy Kenyans
and expatriates and generally packed on weekends.
Witnesses said the gunmen spoke Arabic or Somali
and executed shoppers, in what appeared to be the worst attack in
Nairobi since an Al-Qaeda bombing at the US embassy killed more than 200
in 1998.
The Red Cross said that some 20 people had been killed and another 50 wounded in the attack.
In a televised address late last night, however,
Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta confirmed that 39 people had been
killed, including members of his family, and 150 injured.
he operation to secure the mall and catch the gunmen was ongoing, added the Kenyan president.
he operation to secure the mall and catch the gunmen was ongoing, added the Kenyan president.
As security forces were trying to secure a
multi-screen cinema complex on the mall’s top floor, a police source
said it had been confirmed that the attackers were holding at least
seven hostages.
An AFP reporter said she saw at least 20 people
rescued from a toy shop. Dozens of wounded, some of them bleeding
children, were stretchered away from the mall.
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.”
Shocked people -- black, white and Indian -- could
be seen running away from the Westgate centre clutching children while
others crawled along walls to avoid stray bullets.
‘I saw people being executed’
The mall -- which has several Israeli-owned
businesses, is a hub for Nairobi-based Westerners and one of the
foremost symbols of Kenya’s affluent classes -- has long been considered
a potential terror target.
Kenneth Kerich, who was shopping when the attack happened, described scenes of 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.
“Initially we thought it is police fighting thugs.
But we could not leave until when officers walked in, shot in the air
and told us to get out.”
An eyewitness who survived the assault by gunmen said he saw the body of a child being wheeled out of the mall.
SOURCE: THE CITIZEN
“The gunmen tried to fire at my head but missed. At least 50
people were shot. There are definitely many casualties,” mall employee
Sudjar Singh told AFP.
“I saw a young boy carried out on a shopping cart,
it looked like he was about 5 or 6. It looked like he was gone, he was
not moving or making any noise.”
Vehicles riddled with bullet holes were left
abandoned in front of the mall as the Red Cross appealed for blood
donations and police instructed residents of the Westlands neighbourhood
to stay away.
“Our officers are on the ground carrying out an
evacuation of those inside as they search for the attackers who are said
to be inside,” Inspector General of Police David Kimaiyo said.
“We have managed to evacuate some people to
safety. We urge Kenyans to avoid the area as we pursue the thugs,”
Kenya’s interior ministry said on Twitter.
The Westgate mall, which opened in 2007, has
restaurants, cafes, banks, a large supermarket and a cinema that attract
thousands of people every day and have made it a Nairobi landmark.
It is popular with the large expatriate community
living in the residential neighbourhoods around it, including with
foreign staff from the United Nations, which has its third largest
global centre nearby.
Security agencies have regularly included the
Westgate shopping centre on lists of sites they feared could be targeted
by Al Qaeda-linked groups.
The Somali insurgents from the Shebab group have
repeatedly threatened to strike at the heart of Kenya in retaliation for
Nairobi’s military involvement alongside the government they are trying
to overthrow.