Toronto Star

Kenya says all gunmen killed in hotel seige

Death toll in Nairobi attack climbs to 21, plus five attackers; 28 people sent to hospital

- CHRISTOPHE­R TORCHIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The death toll from an extremist attack on a luxury hotel and shopping complex in Nairobi climbed to 21, plus the five militants killed, police said Wednesday in the aftermath of the brazen overnight siege by al-Shabab gunmen. Two people accused of facilitati­ng the attack were arrested.

The number of those killed at the DusitD2 complex rose with the discovery of six more bodies at the scene and the death of a wounded police officer, said Joseph Boinnet, inspector-general of Kenyan police. Twenty-eight people were hurt and taken to the hospital, he said. In a televised address to the nation earlier in the day, President Uhuru Kenyatta announced that the all-night operation by security forces to retake the complex was over and that all of the extremists had been killed.

“We will seek out every person that was involved in the funding, planning and execution of this heinous act,” he vowed.

In an attack that demonstrat­ed al-Shabab’s continued ability to strike Kenya’s capital despite setbacks on the battlefiel­d, extremists stormed the place with guns and explosives. Security camera footage released to local media showed a suicide bomber blowing himself up in a grassy area in the complex, the flash visible along with smoke billowing from the spot where he had been standing.

Of the civilian victims, 16 were Kenyan, one was British, one was American and three were of African descent but their nationalit­ies were not yet identified, police said.

Al-Shabab, which is based in neighbouri­ng Somalia and allied with Al Qaeda, claimed responsibi­lity. The Islamic extremist group also carried out the 2013 attack at Nairobi’s nearby Westgate Mall that killed 67 people, and an assault on Kenya’s Garissa University in 2015 that claimed 147 lives, mostly students.

While U.S. airstrikes and African Union forces in Somalia have degraded the group’s ability to operate, it is still capa- ble of carrying out spectacula­r acts of violence in retaliatio­n for the Kenyan military’s campaign against it.

The bloodshed in Kenya’s capital appeared designed to inflict maximum damage to the country’s image of stability and its tourism industry, an important source of revenue. Kenyatta’s announceme­nt that the security operation was complete came about 20 hours after the first reports of the attack. The Kenyan Red Cross said about 50 people were unaccounte­d for. But many of those were believed not to have been in the complex during the attack.

 ?? SIMON MAINA AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A woman cries after identifyin­g the body of a relative at the Chiromo mortuary Wednesday in Nairobi, Kenya.
SIMON MAINA AFP/GETTY IMAGES A woman cries after identifyin­g the body of a relative at the Chiromo mortuary Wednesday in Nairobi, Kenya.

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