KenyaтАЩs president says militants involved in hotel attack are dead

14 civilians were killed in assault by Somali Islamist group Al-Shabaab

Please use the sharing tools found via the share button at the top or side of articles. Copying articles to share with others is a breach of FT.com T&Cs and Copyright Policy. Email licensing@ft.com to buy additional rights. Subscribers may share up to 10 or 20 articles per month using the gift article service. More information can be found here.
https://www.ft.com/content/3b33974e-18d5-11e9-b93e-f4351a53f1c3

KenyaтАЩs President Uhuru Kenyatta said on Wednesday that the security operation at a Nairobi hotel complex attacked by militants was over and all the тАЬterroristsтАЭ involved had been killed. Kenyatta said that 14 civilians were confirmed dead and more than 700 others had been evacuated to safety by security forces Al-Shabaab, the Somali Islamist group linked to al-Qaeda, claimed responsibility for the attack on a hotel and office complex in Nairobi, KenyaтАЩs capital. The attack, which started at 3pm and was still continuing several hours later, took place in the upmarket Westlands neighbourhood within a short distance of where al-Shabaab killed at least 67 people at the Westgate shopping mall in 2013.

Gunfire was first reported at NairobiтАЩs Dusit D2 hotel and complex, where several foreign businesses rent office space. Police said they had dispatched special units to the scene amid reports that gunmen тАФ and possibly members of the public тАФ were still inside. Witnesses told a local television channel that four gunmen had jumped from a car before shooting security guards and storming the complex. Video footage showed burning cars and dozens of people fleeing the scene. Henry Githaiga, a witness who was evacuated from the building, said he first heard an explosion before people started running haphazardly. тАЬThere was a very loud explosion as people tried to evacuate,тАЭ he said, adding that most of them returned to the building due to gun shots. Cars caught fire in the Dusit hotel compound as the attack unfolded.

The assault took place a day after a Kenyan court ruled that three men must stand trial for alleged involvement in the Westgate mall attack, which shook KenyaтАЩs security establishment and forced an overhaul of its anti-terrorist activities. A spokesman for al-ShabaabтАЩs military operations, Abdiasis Abu Musab, said, according to Reuters: тАЬWe are behind the attack in Nairobi. The operation is going on. We shall give details later.тАЭ Women flee through a window of the Dusit hotel ┬й AP The al-Qaida-affiliated group has waged an insurgency in southern Somalia for more than a decade and intensified attacks against Kenyan targets since the country sent troops to Somalia in 2011 to support a UN-backed operation. Three years ago, al-Shabaab militants stormed a Kenyan military base in Somalia, killing about 140 soldiers. Al-Shabaab blames Kenya for allowing its territory to be used as a US base for air attacks on its suspected camps in Somalia. According to Africom, the US Africa Command based in Germany, Washington has significantly stepped up drone attacks on suspected al-Shabaab terrorists since Donald Trump became US president. In 2015 al-Shabaab militants launched an attack on a teacher-training college in Garissa, near the Somali border, in which 148 people died. In October last year, two Kenyan teachers were killed when al-Shabaab militants threw an explosive device into a school near the Somali border. тАЬAl-Shabaab has a number of reasons why it is attacking Kenya,тАЭ said Rashid Abdi, an expert on the Horn of Africa at International Crisis Group, a non-profit policy research organisation. тАЬThe major goal is to create pressure for the Kenyan government to have its soldiers out of Somalia.тАЭ Get alerts

 

рддрдкрд╛рдИрдВрдХреЛ рдкреНрд░рддрд┐рдХреГрдпрд╛

рдЕрдиреНрдп рдЦрдмрд░

рддрд╛рдЬрд╛ рдЦрдмрд░

рддрдкрд╛рдИрдВрдХреЛ рдкреНрд░рддрд┐рдХреГрдпрд╛