Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
A Kenya Defence Force soldier runs for cover during al-Shabaab’s Garissa attack in April. The group is suspected of carrying out another atrocity in a village near the Somalia border.<br>
A Kenya Defence Force soldier runs for cover during al-Shabaab’s Garissa attack in April. The group is suspected of carrying out another atrocity in a village near the Somalia border.
Photograph: Noor Khamis/Reuters
A Kenya Defence Force soldier runs for cover during al-Shabaab’s Garissa attack in April. The group is suspected of carrying out another atrocity in a village near the Somalia border.
Photograph: Noor Khamis/Reuters

Al-Shabaab kills more than a dozen in Kenya attack weeks before Obama visit

This article is more than 9 years old

Fighters from group targeted workers in remote village near Somalia border

Somalia’s al-Shabaab group has claimed responsibility for a gun and grenade attack that killed 14 sleeping quarry workers and wounded many others in northern Kenya. The attack was staged only weeks before a visit by President Barack Obama to the east African country.

Gunmen raided the remote village of Soko Mbuzi near the Somalia border at about 1am on Tuesday, smashing through a gate using a petrol bomb before hurling grenades at workers and spraying those who tried to flee with bullets.

Local police chiefs said the attack bore all the hallmarks of the al-Qaida affiliate, which has been blamed for a series of atrocities in east Africa.

“All indications are that they were al-Shabaab militants. They destroyed metal grilled doors before they bombed the houses and opened fire on the innocent victims,” the Mandera county commissioner, Alex Ole Nkoyo, told the Standard newspaper.

An al-Shabaab spokesman later claimed responsibility, telling Reuters the raid was part of its campaign against Kenya.

Several victims were rushed to hospital although the number of the injured was unclear.

The killings follow a pattern in which al-Shabaab militants have targeted non-locals working in the predominantly Muslim region near the Kenyan-Somalia border. Workers from areas outside the region tend to be Christian.

In December, 36 quarry workers were killed in similar circumstances in the same county.

Kenya has been on a heightened state of alert since it was announced in March that Obama will tour the country at the end of July to attend a global entrepreneurship summit.

Although the visit has generated considerable enthusiasm, in part due to the fact Obama’s father was Kenyan, there are concerns militants could take advantage of the occasion to stage attacks.

Hundreds of security officers have been mobilised to bolster security and surveillance cameras have been installed in many streets in the capital, Nairobi. But al-Shabaab has shown itself capable of operating at will in the vast, historically marginalised region near the Somalia border where they are most active.

After a particularly shocking shooting rampage in a university in the northern town of Garissa left 148 students and security students dead in April, Obama called his Kenyan counterpart, Uhuru Kenyatta, to offer his support and said he would not change his plans to visit the country.

The Kenyatta government, which has come under intense public pressure to contain the al-Shabaab attacks, is expected to find itself under increasing scrutiny in the weeks leading up to Obama’s visit.

Comments (…)

Sign in or create your Guardian account to join the discussion

Most viewed

Most viewed