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Sunday 5 April 2015

POLICE PROBE ON TANZANIAN INVOLVED IN GARISSA ATTACK


 
Minister for Foreign Affairs and International Co-operation Bernard Membe.

By Frank Aman  
The police are investigating on a person who is said to be a Tanzanian national linked to the Garissa University attack on Thursday.

 
It was reported on Friday that five people are in custody following the al-Shabaab attack in eastern Kenya on Thursday which left almost 150 people dead.
 
Speaking to this paper yesterday, police spokesperson Advera Bulimba said it is too early to issue official statement on the matter, but insisting that police are working tirelessly to identify the person.
 
According to the report four more people have been found alive on the campus, but two are suspects and have been arrested including the person believed to be Tanzanian. 
 
She said they have received reports from various international media outlets that there was one Tanzanian among the five arrested people at the scene.
 
Asked if there were Tanzanians at Garissa University, Ms Bulimba said police were still investigating to establish whether there were Tanzanian students studying there at the campus.     
 
“It is too early to say but police are still investigating to identify if there are Tanzanian nationals studying at the college as well as to get more information about the person who was arrested at the scene,” she said.  
 
The Minister for Foreign Affairs and International Co-operation Bernard Membe, his deputy Mahadhi Juma Maalim, and the government spokesman, Assa Mwambene, could not be reached when this paper contacted them. 
 
A witness told BBC Africa on Friday that she heard the gunman receiving instructions on mobile phones, and speaking in Kiswahili, an official language in Kenya - raising the possibility that some of the attackers were locals and not from Somalia, al-Shabaab's heartland.
 
Reports say gunmen attacked the campus early Thursday as morning prayers were underway, shooting indiscriminately and taking hostages before being killed by security forces, officials said.
 
 Friday evening survivors of the Garissa attack said they played dead for hours to save themselves from being shot.
 
The official death toll is now at 148, excluding the four terrorists. It includes 142 students, three university guards and three policemen.
 
The militants spoke in fluent Kiswahili and were fairly young, survivors recalled. They told them: “You pay taxes to buy guns which we are now using to kill you.
 
“They told us to stop paying taxes because it is the taxes that the government uses to buy guns for the Kenya Defence Forces. They claimed they were using guns snatched from Kenyan soldiers,” said Millicent Murugi from Embu, a second year student of Education.
 
A pregnant young woman told Saturday Nation at Garissa Hospital: “They also told us that if (President) Kenyatta doesn’t remove Kenyan soldiers from Somalia, they will kill everybody else on sight.”
 
Al-Shabaab, which is linked to al-Qaeda, said it carried out the attack. The group says it is at war with Kenya, which sent troops to Somalia in 2011 to fight the militants. 
 
Al-Shabaab is a Somali group that the United States designated as a foreign terrorist organisation in March 2008. It wants to turn Somalia into a fundamentalist Islamic state, according to the Council on Foreign Relations.
 
The group has been blamed for attacks in Somalia that have killed international aid workers, journalists, civilian leaders and African Union peacekeepers.
 
It has a history of striking abroad, too. Before admitting to the Kenya quarry attack, Al-Shabaab claimed responsibility for the July 2010 suicide bombings in Kampala, Uganda, that killed more than 70 people, including a US citizen, who had gathered at different locations to watch the broadcast of the World Cup final soccer match.
 
And Al-Shabaab has links to other organisations. In February 2012, the group's leader, Ahmed Abdi Godane, and al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri released a video announcing the alliance of the two organisations.
 
SOURCE: THE GUARDIAN

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