Gunmen
have massacred at least 36 quarry workers in a fresh attack in Kenya’s
northeast, police and the Red Cross said on Tuesday, the latest in a series of
strikes in the troubled region bordering war-torn Somalia.
The
attackers sprayed gunfire at tents where the workers were sleeping in the early
hours of Tuesday morning near the town of Mandera, where Somalia’s
Al-Qaeda-affiliated Shebab and other militia have carried out a string of
raids, Kenyan media said.
The
gunmen then separated non-Muslims from the other workers, beheaded several and
executed the rest with a bullet to the head, police sources and media reports
said, a pattern of attack similar to the killing of 28 people on a bus in the
same region last month.
The
quarry killings follow a separate attack Monday night in the town of Wajir —
which like Mandera is close to the dangerous border with war-torn Somalia —
which left one person dead and 12 wounded when gunmen hurled grenades and fired
into a bar.
“Our team
is on the ground undertaking assessments of the attack,” the Kenya Red Cross
said Tuesday.
Police
spokesman Zipporah Mboroki confirmed the attacks but said the force would
provide exact tolls of those killed later.
However,
a senior police official said 36 people had been killed and there were fears
others may have been abducted.
“We have
lost 36 people, but there are others missing,” said the police official, who
asked not to be named. “We don’t know whether they were taken by the
attackers.”
– Region
repeatedly hit –
The
quarry attack, some 15 kilometres (10 miles) from the remote town of Mandera,
is close to where Islamists last month executed 28 non-Muslims who were grabbed
from a bus.
The
Shehab said the bus attack was carried out in revenge for police raids on
mosques in Kenya’s key port of Mombasa.
Kenya has
suffered a series of attacks since invading Somalia in 2011 to attack the
Shebab. Kenyan forces have since joined an African Union force battling the
Islamists.
No one
has so far claimed responsibility for either of the attacks overnight Monday to
Tuesday.
Several
key unions including for civil servants have warned members to leave the
restive northeast until the government can ensure their safety.
Professionals
working in the largely Muslim and ethnic Somali northeastern regions often come
from further south in Kenya, where Christians make up about 80 percent of the population.
Those
working in the quarry attacked on Tuesday were also reported to have been from
outside the region.
On
Sunday, Kenyan media reported that the embattled interior minister and police
chief may soon be sacked over “repeated lapses” in security following a wave of
attacks.
Both
officials mentioned in the report have been under fire since last year’s attack
by the Shebab against the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi, in which at least
67 people were killed in a siege involving just four gunmen and which lasted
four days.
Worries
over internal security mounted when Shebab rebels massacred 100 people in a
string of raids against villages in the Lamu region on the Kenyan coast in June
and July.
--Vanguard News
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