By Richard Lough and Edmund Blair
NAIROBI (Reuters) - Islamist militants were holding hostages on
Sunday at a shopping mall in Nairobi, where at least 68 people were
killed in an attack by Somalia's al Shabaab group.
The al Qaeda-affiliated movement demanded Kenya pull troops out of
its northern neighbor, where they have pushed al Shabaab onto the
defensive over the past two years.
There was no word of other demands from the dozen or so gunmen - and
possibly women - said to be barricaded in a supermarket with an unknown
number of captives. One Kenyan TV station said 30 were still being
held, nearly 36 hours after Saturday's devastating assault.
Brief volleys of gunfire and a blast interrupted a day of stalemate.
A Reuters correspondent saw security personnel on the move and, as dusk
closed in, two helicopters swooped low over the Westgate shopping
center, which has several Israeli-owned outlets and is frequented by
prosperous Kenyans and foreigners.
But despite a Twitter comment from a Kenyan security agency
suggesting an imminent operation, the evening passed with little sign of
action.
Kenya's president, vowing not to abandon the "war on terror" in
Somalia, was cautious about the outcome, saying only that the chances of
the attackers being "neutralized" were "as good ... as we can hope
for".
"We will punish the masterminds swiftly and painfully," he said. In
addition to the dead, more than 175 people were wounded in an attack
that began around the middle of the day on Saturday, when the mall was
heaving with customers.
Previous such raids, in Russia, the 2008 Mumbai attacks or January's
al Qaeda assault on an Algerian gas plant, have generally ended with
many hostages losing their lives.
British Prime Minister David Cameron, confirming at least three
Britons were dead, said: "We should prepare ourselves for further bad
news."
U.S. President Barack Obama called Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta
to express condolences for the "terrorist attack" and offered support to
bring the perpetrators to justice.
Dutch and Chinese citizens were also killed in the attack claimed by
al shabaab, as were a French mother and daughter and two diplomats from
Canada and Ghana. U.S. citizens were wounded.
For hours after Saturday's attack, the dead had been strewn around
tables of unfinished meals. At one burger restaurant, a man and woman
lay in a final embrace before their bodies were removed. Only after
Kenyan forces moved in could many shoppers escape, some after a full day
hiding in terror.
The focus of attention on Sunday was the mall's branch of Nakumatt
supermarket, one of Kenya's biggest chains. A Red Cross volunteer said
nine more bodies were taken out of the store late on Sunday, which the
Red Cross said raised the toll to 68.
Volunteers said they believed more corpses were still inside, unreachable for now.
'WE SHALL NOT RELENT'
Scores of Kenyans gathered at a site overlooking the mall, awaiting
what they expected to be a violent denouement. "They entered through
blood, that's how they'll leave," said Jonathan Maungo, a private
security guard.
President Kenyatta, facing his first major security challenge since
being elected in March, said he lost a nephew and the man's fiancée in
the raid and vowed to defeat the militants.
He urged wealthy governments not to warn their citizens against
visiting a country heavily dependent on tourist income, while insisting
he would not pull out Kenyan troops from Somalia: "We shall not relent
on the war on terror."
Kenya Defense Forces soldiers arrive at the Oshwal Centre now serving as a makeshift me
Saying all the gunmen were now in one place, Kenyatta added: "I
assure Kenyans that we have as good a chance to successfully neutralise
the terrorists as we can hope for."
But the heavily armed and well disciplined attackers, still unidentified, had shown no hesitation in killing civilians.
The spokesman for al Shabaab's military operations told Reuters in
Somalia his group had nothing to fear: "Where will Uhuru Kenyatta get
the power with which he threatened us?" said Sheikh Abdiasis Abu Musab.
The assault was the biggest single attack in Kenya since al Qaeda's
East Africa cell bombed the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi in 1998, killing
more than 200 people.
Al Shabaab's siege underlined its ability to cause major disruptions
with relatively limited resources, despite having lost its hold on
Somali cities after African troops moved in.
"In terms of capacity, while the group has grown considerably weaker
in terms of being able to wage a conventional war, it is now ever more
capable of carrying out asymmetric warfare," said Abdi Aynte, director
of Mogadishu's Heritage Institute of Policy Studies.
COMBING THE MALL
Kenyatta, who said Kenya was still trying to establish conclusively
who was responsible, said women were among the 10 to 15 attackers. Asked
whether hostages had explosives strapped to them, he said he would not
comment on operational issues.
Kenya's deputy president, William Ruto, asked judges at the
International Criminal Court in The Hague to allow him to return home to
help deal with the siege and its aftermath.
He and Kenyatta face charges of crimes against humanity for their
alleged role in coordinating deadly violence after the contested 2007
elections, when they ran in rival camps. Both deny the charges. They won
a vote on the same ticket in March.
The dead in Saturday's assault included children, and the wounded
ranged in age from 2 to 78. More than 1,000 people were evacuated by
security forces combing the mall, littered with shattered glass and
pools of blood.
An Israeli security source said Israeli advisers were at the scene helping Kenya work out how to end the siege.
Shortly after shots were fired on Sunday, Kenyan troops in
camouflage ran below a restaurant terrace along the front of the
building that had buzzed with customers when the attack began.
Kenya's National Disaster Operation Centre referred to a "major
engagement" on its Twitter account when a blast was heard. "It's going
on, it's going good," one Kenyan soldier who had been in the mall on
Sunday told reporters as he left the scene. But later in the evening,
the situation appeared calm.
After emerging on Sunday morning from a hiding place under vehicle
in the basement car park, a woman, giving her name as Cecilia, told
Reuters by telephone she had seen three men in the attack who looked
like Arabs, judging by their skin color.
"They were shooting from the exit ramp, shooting everywhere," she
said. "I saw people being shot all around me, some with blood pouring
from bad wounds. I was just praying, praying 'God, keep me alive' and
that my day hadn't come."
Witnesses said the attackers had AK-47 rifles and wore ammunition
belts. One militant was shot and arrested early on in the siege, but
died shortly afterwards.
Kenya sent troops across its northern border into Somalia in October
2011 to pursue militants whom it blamed for kidnapping tourists and
attacking its security forces.
Al Shabaab's last big attack outside Somalia was a twin assault in
nearby Uganda, targeting people watching the World Cup final on
television in Kampala in 2010, killing 77 people.
(Additional reporting by James Macharia, Kevin Mwanza, Drazen
Jorgic, Humphrey Malalo and Duncan Miriri in Nairobi, Pascal Fletcher in
Johannesburg and Feisal Omar in Mogadishu; Writing by Edmund Blair and
Alastair Macdonald; Editing by Andrew Heavens)
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