Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Kenya jails 9 more suspects Police dispose of explosive found after deadly hotel attack

- CHRISTOPHE­R TORCHIA

NAIROBI, Kenya — Kenyan authoritie­s on Thursday arrested nine more people for their alleged involvemen­t in the deadly extremist attack on a luxury hotel complex in Nairobi this week, bringing the total number of suspects detained to 11, police said.

The suspects “are being questioned on their specific roles in the terrorist attack” at the DusitD2 complex on Tuesday, said a police officer who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivit­y of the matter. Two people were taken into custody on Wednesday.

The attack took the lives of 20 civilians, one police officer and five attackers.

Kenyan bomb-disposal experts, meanwhile, found and safely detonated an explosive left over from the attack, and the Kenya Red Cross said no one appeared to be missing after it checked nearly 100 reported cases.

The Kenyan government said its quick reaction to the assault reflected improvemen­ts in its ability to respond to such brazen attacks on civilian targets. It was “much better handled” in comparison to the 2013 attack on the nearby Westgate Mall, said Joseph Mucheru, the informatio­n minister. Police took hours to respond to that attack and official informatio­n was scarce or conflictin­g, leading to changes.

“The speed, the response and the conclusion of this matter was swift,” Mucheru told journalist­s.

Al-Shabab, the al-Qaidalinke­d extremist group that carried out the 2013 attack that killed 67 people, claimed responsibi­lity for the hotel assault.

In contrast to the government’s fumbling response to the 2013 attack, the better-coordinate­d operation at the hotel was under the “central command” of the head of the paramilita­ry wing of the Kenyan police known as the General Service Unit, according to The Standard, a Kenyan newspaper. It also said there were “fewer implausibl­e narratives from senior security officials than happened in 2013.”

Still, the newspaper said, there were hard questions including: “How did the assailants manage to move their weaponry through the numerous roadblocks to their hideout and to the scene of crime undetected?”

President Uhuru Kenyatta on Wednesday declared that the security operation to retake the complex was over, about 20 hours after the attack started.

With the attack, al-Shabab showed it can still strike despite heavy pressure by U.S., Somali and African Union forces against its stronghold­s in neighborin­g Somalia.

While U.S. airstrikes have kept al-Shabab on the run, the new attack shows the group is still capable of carrying out acts of violence in retaliatio­n for Kenya sending troops to Somalia to fight it. The Islamic extremist group’s deadliest attack in Kenya was the assault on Garissa University in 2015 that claimed 147 lives, mostly students.

This week’s 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.

The informatio­n minister, however, said he had been impressed by Kenyans who posted images highlighti­ng wildlife and other attraction­s on social media in reaction to the attack. He noted that the Nairobi stock exchange made gains on Wednesday.

“There’s that positivity,” he said.

U.S. Ambassador Robert Godec said the United States was working closely with Kenyan authoritie­s, and he dismissed “false reports on social media” that the U.S. knew about the attack in advance.

Of the dead, 16 were Kenyan, one was British, one was American and three were of African descent but their nationalit­ies were not yet identified, Kenyan police said late Wednesday. Twenty-eight people were hospitaliz­ed.

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