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GARISSA,
Kenya (Associated Press)
— The Islamic extremists who slaughtered 147 people at a college in Kenya as
they shouted "God is great" appeared to have planned extensively,
even targeting a site where Christians had gone to pray, survivors said Friday.
Police on Friday were at the campus of Garissa University
College, taking fingerprints from the bodies of the four assailants and of the
students and security officials who died, for thorough identification purposes.
The northeastern Kenyan town lacks the facilities to store all the bodies.
In Nairobi,
Kenya's capital, family members were lining up at a morgue where about 20
bodies had already been airlifted from Garissa, victims of the worst attack in
Kenya since the 1998 bombing of the U.S. Embassy by al-Qaida which killed more
than 200 people. Screaming and crying relatives of the victims were assisted by
Kenyan Red Cross staffers, who tried to console them.
One of the
first things that the al-Shabab gunmen did when they assaulted the campus early
Thursday, survivor Helen Titus said, was to head for a lecture hall where
Christians were in early morning prayer. Al-Shabab is a Somalia-based extremist
group with ties to al-Qaida.
"They
investigated our area. They knew everything," Helen Titus told The
Associated Press at a hospital in Garissa where she was being treated for a
bullet wound to the wrist. Officials said 79 people were wounded.
Titus, a
21-year-old English literature student, said she covered her face and hair with
the blood of classmates and lay still at one point during al-Shabab's deadliest
attack on Kenyan soil in hopes the Islamic extremist gunmen would think she was
dead.
The gunmen also told students hiding in dormitories to come out,
assuring them that they would not be killed, said Titus, who wore a patient's
gown as she sat on a bench in the hospital yard.
Esther
Wanjiru said she was awake at the time of the attack. Asked if she lost anyone,
she said: "My best friend."
Another survivor, Nina Kozel, said she was woken up by screaming
and that many students escaped by sprinting to the fences and jumping over
them. Some suffered bruises, she said. Many men were unable to escape, and hid
in vain under beds and in closets in their rooms, according to Kozel.
"They
were shot there and then," she said.
Those who
surrendered were either selected for killing, or freed in some cases,
apparently because they were Muslim, she said.
The killers shouted "God is great" in Arabic as they
proceeded with the slaughter, she said.
Security
forces stood guard Friday at the gate of the school. School slogans on the wall
outside said "Oasis of Innovation" and "A World Class University
of Technological Processes and Development."
At one
point, a group approached the college gate and was blocked by soldiers. Several
women began shrieking and collapsed in apparent grief in the dust for several
minutes. A bystander said the son of one of the women had died in the attack.
A small
group of male demonstrators walked down a main road in Garissa with signs that
read "We are against the killing of innocent Kenyans!!!! We are tired!!"
and "Enough is enough. No more killing!! We are with you, our fellow
Kenyans."
The masked
attackers — strapped with explosives and armed with AK-47s — singled out
non-Muslim students and then gunned them down without mercy, survivors said.
The gunmen took dozens of hostages in a dormitory as they battled troops and
police before the operation ended after about 13 hours, witnesses said.
Al-Shabab spokesman Ali Mohamud Rage said fighters the group was
responsible for the attack. The al-Qaida-linked group has been blamed for a
series of attacks in Kenya, including the siege at the Westgate Mall in Nairobi
in 2013 that killed 67 people, as well as other violence in the north. The
group has vowed to retaliate against Kenya for sending troops to Somalia in
2011 to fight the militants staging cross-border attacks and kidnappings.
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