Montreal Gazette

Foreigners a ‘legitimate target’ but Muslims were allowed to leave, al-Shabab confirms

- ANDREW O. SELSKY

JOHANNESBU­RG — Al-Shabab, the armed Somali Islamic extremist group that attacked a shopping mall in Kenya, said Wednesday that foreigners were a “legitimate target” and confirmed witness accounts that gunmen tried to let Muslims go free while killing or taking the others captive. In an email exchange Wednesday with the Associated Press, al-Shabab said: “The Mujahideen carried out a meticulous vetting process at the mall and have taken every possible precaution to separate the Muslims from the Kuffar (disbelieve­rs) before carrying out their attack.” According to published accounts, witnesses have said the gunmen rounded up people, asked questions about Islam that a Muslim would know and told the Muslims to leave the mall. Al-Shabab had threatened retaliatio­n against Kenya for sending its troops into Somalia against al-Shabab, and many of those killed in an attack that horrified the world were Kenyans. The group’s leader, Ahmed Godane, said in a new audio statement Wednesday that the attack was carried out in retaliatio­n for the West’s support for Kenya’s Somalia invasion and the “interest of their oil companies.” Godane said there would be more attacks if Kenya doesn’t withdraw its troops. Despite their efforts to spare Muslims, some of those killed were members of the faith. One man, Louis Bawa, whose wife Zahira and daughter Jennah were killed, told a London newspaper that al-Shabab was “using religion as an excuse to kill people.” “Zahira and Jennah were Muslims, but these animals just shot them the same as all of the others,” Bawa told the London Daily Telegraph. Asked if the separation of Muslims from non-Muslims at the outset of the mall attack represente­d a change in tactics, the group insisted in an email that it “has never deliberate­ly targeted Muslims.” “Our targets have always been disbelieve­rs, invaders and the apostate government­s officials/troops who are allied with

them,” it said. Yet al-Shabab, whose name means “the youth” in Arabic, has carried out suicide bombings in Somalia against military and government targets but has also set off bombs at a college graduation ceremony in Mogadishu, at restaurant­s and other locations, killing Muslim civilians. Al-Shabab controlled much of Somalia, which borders Kenya to the east, for several years, including most of the capital Mogadishu. African Union forces pushed the alQaida-affiliated group out of Mogadishu in 2011 and Kenya sent in troops that year, further squeezing the group into smaller territory in Somalia’s south.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada