Kenya marks Garissa university massacre anniversary

Agence France-Presse

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Kenya marks Garissa university massacre anniversary

EPA

The country marks the first anniversary of the Garissa university massacre with a run in honor of the victims as well as prayers and candlelight vigils organized by ordinary citizens

GARISSA, Kenya – Kenyans on Saturday, April 2, commemorated the first anniversary of a terrorist attack that killed 148 people, mostly students, at a university in Garissa in the country’s worst massacre since 1998.

Four gunmen from the Shebab, Al-Qaeda’s East Africa branch, raided Garissa University College on April 2 last year, shooting students dead in their dormitories and then rounding up and executing scores more in a hall of residence.

It was the worst terrorist attack to hit Kenya since Al-Qaeda bombed the US embassy in Nairobi in 1998 killing 213 people.

On Saturday, a group of some 100 people wearing T-shirts with peace slogans gathered in Garissa, 365 kilometers (225 miles) northeast of the capital Nairobi, to participate in a run in honor of the victims.

“We stand with the parents, we want to tell them that together as a country, from the north to the south, west to east, Muslims and Christians… together we must fight terror,” said Garissa MP Aden Duale.

Prayers and candlelight vigils were due to be held in Garissa and Nairobi, led by government officials.

Government involvement in the anniversary commemorations contrast starkly with the days following the attack itself when it was left to ordinary folk to organize memorial vigils.

The security response to Garissa was – as during an assault on Nairobi’s Westgate mall in 2013 – strongly criticized by many Kenyans. 

It took 16 hours for a special anti-terror unit to bring the attack to an end, with their deployment slowed by a senior police officer who had commandeered the force aeroplane for a family excursion.

As with Westgate there has been no public enquiry into what went wrong.

Kenya has suffered at the hands of Shebab since sending troops into neighboring Somalia to fight the jihadists in 2011. 

Terrorist attacks have been frequent and deadly while in Somalia, Kenyan soldiers have been killed and their commanders accused of war profiteering through involvement in charcoal and sugar smuggling.

In January, Kenya suffered what is thought to be its worst-ever military loss when an army outpost in southern Somalia was overrun by Shebab fighters. 

Some estimate that as many as 180 soldiers died in the El-Adde raid but the government has so far refused to give any numbers nor name the dead. – Raphael Ambasu, AFP/Rappler.com

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