Showing posts with label Kenya. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kenya. Show all posts

Monday, March 24, 2014

Workers End Strikes in Kenya, Continue Actions in Tunisia, Egypt and South Africa

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Workers End Strikes in Kenya, Continue Actions in Tunisia, Egypt and South Africa

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Complete News Kenya frontrunners hail from powerful political dynasties

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Complete News Kenya frontrunners hail from powerful political dynasties

Friday, December 27, 2013

VIDEO: South Sudan Offers Cease-Fire To Rebels









South Sudan’s government announced Friday it would be willing to accept a cease-fire from the rebel group it is currently fighting.

















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VIDEO: South Sudan Offers Cease-Fire To Rebels

Saturday, December 14, 2013

At Least Four Are Killed in Kenya Van Explosion


NAIROBI, Kenya — At least four people were killed Saturday when a bomb exploded inside a passenger van in Nairobi, the city police said, in what appears to be the first attack here in the Kenyan capital since a deadly terrorist assault on an upscale shopping mall in September.




The explosion took place as the minibus was traveling from the Eastleigh neighborhood to the city center, said Benson Kibue, the chief of police in Nairobi. Investigators believe that a homemade bomb was used in the attack, which injured at least 25 others, he said.


Sometimes called Little Mogadishu, Eastleigh is known for its large population of ethnic Somalis. The neighborhood came under fresh scrutiny by investigators after the Sept. 21 attack on the Westgate Mall in Nairobi, a bloody four-day siege in which at least 67 people were killed. A Western official familiar with the Westgate attack investigation told The Associated Press last month that all four attackers were ethnic Somalis who had spent time in Eastleigh. The official confirmed that all four gunmen arrived in Kenya in June and had frequented a gym in the neighborhood.


Kenya has been the scene of multiple terrorist attacks since the country sent its soldiers to Somalia in 2011 to fight the Shabab, an extremist Somali militant group.


The Shabab claimed responsibility for the Westgate attack, saying it was in retribution for Kenya’s involvement in Somalia. The group, which is linked to Al Qaeda, had threatened large-scale attacks for years, and it has said more will be carried out unless Kenya withdraws.


Kenya has been grappling with its large population of Somali refugees since the Westgate attack, with government officials announcing plans to speed up their return home. Nearly 500,000 Somali refugees live in Kenya, most of them in the sprawling Dadaab refugee settlement near the Somali border. In the last several years, Somali refugee camps, particularly Dadaab, have been hit by a spate of blasts by grenades and other explosives.


Last month, Kenya, Somalia and the United Nations refugee agency signed an agreement saying the 475,000 registered Somali refugees inside Kenya would receive support when they returned to their homeland — if they chose to return.




NYT > International Home



At Least Four Are Killed in Kenya Van Explosion

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

NYPD Held Mall Terrorism Exercise After Kenya Attack


Kurt Nimmo
Infowars.com
December 11, 2013


On Wednesday, the New York Police Department admitted it had conducted a late night drill at a closed shopping mall in November following the terrorist attack at a mall in Kenya on September 21. Police officials said the undisclosed drill was conducted in order to prevent chaos in the event such an attack occurred in New York.


NYPD boss Ray Kelly told the media during a news conference at police headquarters that the exercise was designed to rest the response of police officers. The NYPD boasts of having thwarted more than a dozen terrorist incidents since the September 11, 2001, attacks. Kelly said now “is a time for vigilance and not complacency. The world we are in remains a very dangerous place.”


Details about the police drill held at the Kings Plaza in Brooklyn arrives at the same time as news that the alleged Somali al-Shabab attackers numbered three or four and were not heavily armed as the media claimed during the stand-off at the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi, Kenya. The New York Police Department report on the siege states that only four terrorists took part in the attack and they were lightly armed with AK-47 rifles. 67 people, mostly civilians, were killed during the attack. The NYPD report concludes that the attackers may have escaped the mall on the first day of the attack. Kenyan police and military conducted a three day siege of the mall.


It was initially claimed that 18 heavily armed gunmen had participated in the raid. “Security sources familiar with the operation to retake the mall said it would have been daunting for even the best-trained soldiers in the world,” The Times reported on September 28. Despite the “bravery of have-a-go heroes,” the newspaper reported, it took hours for a disorganized and under-equipped Kenyan military to respond. Friendly fire resulted in the shooting of a policeman by the military. The military assault resulted in the collapse of several floors of the mall.


The Kenyan government and its intelligence service knew about the al-Shabab attack and had positioned assets at the mall, according to counter-terrorism documents. “We cannot say that this attack comes as a surprise,” said Farah Maalim, former deputy speaker of the Kenyan National Assembly, according to The Guardian. “The possibility of something like this happening, and of failures in the Kenyan intelligence community, has worried us for years. We have an intelligence service more worried about internal party politics than about threats to national security.”


NYPD positioned “critical response vehicles’ tlo New York malls following the Kenya attack in September.


A Harvard trained lawyer who works for the World Bank, Bendita Malakia, claimed she was rescued by an American security team five hours after the assault began. The American’s assertion raised the possibility that American intelligence also knew about the attack beforehand.


Following the attack, counter-terrorism experts warned that an attack of similar magnitude might occur in the United States. “The fear is that if a couple young men returned to the United States with training to conduct military attacks on U.S. citizens, you could take the template of this mall attack that’s happening right now in Kenya and apply it to the U.S.,” Anders Folk, the former assistant U.S. attorney for the District of Minnesota, told the Washington Times in September.


“There possibly could be Americans over there that we don’t know about, and that’s one of my biggest concerns,” Rep. Michael T. McCaul, Texas Republican and chairman of the House Committee on Homeland Security, told CNN. McCaul said “the idea that they can come back into the United States is a real valid concern.”


This article was posted: Wednesday, December 11, 2013 at 2:21 pm









Infowars



NYPD Held Mall Terrorism Exercise After Kenya Attack

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Yeah, Because He Was Born in Kenya

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Yeah, Because He Was Born in Kenya

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Kenya Soldiers Looted During Mall Attack


yahoo.com
October 29, 2013


Two Kenyan soldiers were sacked for stealing items during the deadly siege last month of Nairobi’s Westgate Mall, Kenya’s military chief said Tuesday.


Gen. Julius Karangi, chief of Kenya’s military, identified the sacked soldiers as Victor Otieno and Victor Ashiundu and said they were in detention pending formal charges.


He said the two soldiers were found with mobile phones, cameras and chargers that were stolen from the mall during the siege.


Read more


This article was posted: Tuesday, October 29, 2013 at 10:27 am


Tags: foreign affairs, terrorism









Infowars



Kenya Soldiers Looted During Mall Attack

Monday, October 7, 2013

Target of SEAL raid planned attacks in Kenya








FILE – In this Thursday, Feb. 17, 2011 file photo, al-Shabab fighters march with their weapons during military exercises on the outskirts of Mogadishu, Somalia. Foreign military forces carried out a pre-dawn strike Saturday, Oct. 5, 2013 against foreign fighters in the same southern Somalia village where U.S. Navy SEALS four years ago killed a most-wanted al-Qaida operative, officials said. (AP Photo/Mohamed Sheikh Nor, File)





FILE – In this Thursday, Feb. 17, 2011 file photo, al-Shabab fighters march with their weapons during military exercises on the outskirts of Mogadishu, Somalia. Foreign military forces carried out a pre-dawn strike Saturday, Oct. 5, 2013 against foreign fighters in the same southern Somalia village where U.S. Navy SEALS four years ago killed a most-wanted al-Qaida operative, officials said. (AP Photo/Mohamed Sheikh Nor, File)





This image from the FBI website shows Anas al-Libi. Gunmen in a three-car convoy seized Nazih Abdul-Hamed al-Ruqai, known by his alias Anas al-Libi, an al-Qaeda leader connected to the 1998 embassy bombings in eastern Africa and wanted by the U.S. for more than a decade outside his house Saturday in the Libyan capital, his relatives said. (AP Photo/FBI)





Map locates Barawe, Somalia; 1c x 3 inches; 46.5 mm x 76 mm;





FILE – In this Thursday, Feb. 17, 2011 file photo, hundreds of newly trained al-Shabab fighters perform military exercises in the Lafofe area some 18 km south of Mogadishu, in Somalia. International military forces carried out a pre-dawn strike Saturday, Oct. 5, 2013 against foreign fighters in the same southern Somalia village where U.S. Navy SEALS four years ago killed a most-wanted al-Qaida operative, officials said. (AP Photo/Farah Abdi Warsameh, File)





FILE – In this Thursday, Feb. 17, 2011 file photo, al-Shabab fighters stand in formation with their weapons during military exercises on the outskirts of Mogadishu, Somalia. International military forces carried out a pre-dawn strike Saturday, Oct. 5, 2013 against foreign fighters in the same southern Somalia village where U.S. Navy SEALS four years ago killed a most-wanted al-Qaida operative, officials said. (AP Photo/Mohamed Sheikh Nor, File)













Buy AP Photo Reprints







(AP) — The man U.S. Navy SEALs tried to take down in Somalia over the weekend was a Kenyan who had plotted to attack his country’s parliament building and the United Nations headquarters in Nairobi, according to a Kenyan government intelligence report.


The pre-dawn, seaside SEAL raid on Saturday targeted Abdulkadir Mohamed Abdulkadir, who is also known as Ikrima, a U.S. official told The Associated Press. The U.S. troops are not believed to have captured or killed their target. The official insisted on anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to release the information


In the internal report by Kenya’s National Intelligence Service, Abdulkadir is listed as the lead planner of a plot sanctioned by al-Qaida’s core leadership in Pakistan to carry out multiple attacks in Kenya in late 2011 and early 2012. The AP has previously reported that those attacks, linked to the Somali Islamic extremist group al-Shabab, were disrupted.


The report, which was leaked to AP and other media in the wake of the Sept. 21 terror attack on Nairobi’s Westgate Mall that killed more than 60 people, lists Samantha Lewthwaite — a Briton known in British media as the “White Widow” — as one of several “key actors” in the plot to attack Parliament buildings, the U.N. Office in Nairobi, Kenyan Defense Forces camps and other targets. The plotters also intended to assassinate top Kenyan political and security officials, the report said.


Police disrupted that plot. Lewthwaite, who was married to one of the suicide bombers in the 2005 attack on London’s transit system, escaped capture when she produced a fraudulently obtained South African passport in another person’s name. Late last month Interpol, acting on a request from Kenya, issued an arrest notice for Lewthwaite.


The National Intelligence Service report, in an entry dated exactly one year before the Sept. 21 mall attack, said al-Shabab operatives were in Nairobi “and are planning to mount suicide attacks on undisclosed date, targeting Westgate Mall and Holy Family Basilica.” Two suspects were believed in possession of suicide vests, grenades and AK-47 assault rifles, the report said.


The report makes no mention of Abdulkadir in relation to the attack on Westgate Mall.


The men who attacked the mall last month and held off besieging Kenyan troops for several days were armed with grenades and AK-47s, but apparently had no suicide vests. It was unclear if one planned attack on the mall was foiled and then carried out again or if it was merely postponed for a year by al-Shabab, which claimed responsibility for the carnage.


The internal document shows that Kenyan intelligence officers have detailed information about plots and individuals tasked with carrying them out, and that the spy handlers face a continuous threat. Other targeted sites included the Hilton Hotel, the Yaya shopping mall, the office of the prime minister, and possibly the embassies of the United States — which was blown up by al-Qaida in 1998 — and of Britain and Israel.


The SEAL raid in Somalia was only one of two anti-terror missions by U.S. forces in Africa over the weekend. In Libya on Saturday, the U.S. Army’s Delta Force captured Nazih Abdul-Hamed al-Ruqai, known by his alias Anas al-Libi, an al-Qaida leader linked to the 1998 American Embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania.


That raid prompted a warning Monday from a group of Libyan Islamic extremists who vowed to avenge al-Libi’s capture.


In a statement posted on a militant website Monday, “The Revolutionaries of Benghazi, al-Bayda and Darna” denounced the kidnapping, saying “this shameful act will cost the Libyan government a lot.”


The cities of Benghazi, Bayda and Darna are strongholds of Islamic extremists who are carrying out political assassinations targeting political activists, judges and members of security agencies.


“We owe it to God to fight whoever betrayed his country and involved in this conspiracy,” the group said.


U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said Sunday that al-Libi was in U.S. custody. A U.S. official familiar with the case said later that al-Libi was taken aboard a U.S. warship for questioning. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release details.


The FBI and CIA had been tracking Abu Anas al-Libi for years, said two former U.S. intelligence officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to speak about the case.


One of the former officials said that al-Libi had been living in Pakistan before he returned to Libya before Moammar Gadhafi’s government fell. He went back to Africa to be reunited with his family.


Al-Libi, the former official said, and his network of associates had been involved in battling Gadhafi’s forces.


Once the fighting ended, the U.S. intelligence community began focusing on trying to capture al-Libi, the official said, adding that the U.S. Army’s Delta Force worked with local Libyans to apprehend al-Libi. One of the New York FBI’s counterterrorism squads — CT-6— that focuses on Africa played a significant role in the arrest of al-Libi.


It’s unclear when al-Libi will be brought back to New York to face terrorism charges.


U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry on Monday defended the capture of al-Libi, saying complaints about the operation from Libya and others are unfounded. Kerry said the suspect was a “legal and appropriate target” for the U.S. military and will face justice in a court of law. Kerry added it was important not to “sympathize” with wanted terrorists.


“I hope the perception is in the world that people who commit acts of terror and who have been appropriately indicted by courts of law, by the legal process, will know that United States of America is going to do anything in its power that is legal and appropriate in order to enforce the law and to protect our security,” Kerry told reporters after meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on the sidelines of an Asia-Pacific economic conference in Bali, Indonesia.


“Members of al-Qaida and other terrorist organizations literally can run but they can’t hide,” he added.


___


Associated Press reporters Matthew Lee in Bali, Indonesia, Adam Goldman in Washington and Lee Keath in Cairo contributed to this report. Burns reported from Washington.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Target of SEAL raid planned attacks in Kenya

Target of SEAL raid planned attacks in Kenya



(AP) — The man whom U.S. Navy SEALs tried to nail in Somalia over the weekend was a Kenyan man who had plotted to attack Kenya’s parliament building and the United Nations headquarters in Nairobi, according to a Kenyan government intelligence report.


The pre-dawn, seaside SEAL raid on Saturday targeted Abdulkadir Mohamed Abdulkadir, who is also known as Ikrima, a U.S. official told The Associated Press. The U.S. troops are not believed to have captured or killed their target. The official insisted on anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to release the information


In the internal report by Kenya’s National Intelligence Service, Abdulkadir is listed as the lead planner of a plot sanctioned by al-Qaida’s core leadership in Pakistan to carry out multiple attacks in Kenya in late 2011 and early 2012. The AP has previously reported that those attacks, linked to the Somali Islamic extremist group al-Shabab, were disrupted.


The report, which was leaked to AP and other media in the wake of the Sept. 21 terror attack on Nairobi’s Westgate Mall that killed more than 60 people, lists Samantha Lewthwaite — a Briton known in British media as the “White Widow” — as one of several “key actors” in the plot to attack Parliament buildings, the U.N. Office in Nairobi, Kenyan Defense Forces camps and other targets. The plotters also intended to assassinate top Kenyan political and security officials, the report said.


Police disrupted that plot. Lewthwaite, who was married to one of the suicide bombers in the 2005 attack on London’s transit system, escaped capture when she produced a fraudulently obtained South African passport in another person’s name. Late last month Interpol, acting on a request from Kenya, issued an arrest notice for Lewthwaite.


The National Intelligence Service report, in an entry dated exactly one year before the Sept. 21 mall attack, said al-Shabab operatives were in Nairobi “and are planning to mount suicide attacks on undisclosed date, targeting Westgate Mall and Holy Family Basilica.” Two suspects were believed in possession of suicide vests, grenades and AK-47 assault rifles, the report said.


The men who attacked the Westgate Mall last month and held off besieging Kenyan troops for several days were armed with grenades and AK-47s, but apparently had no suicide vests. It was unclear if one planned attack on the mall was foiled and then carried out again or if it was merely postponed for a year by al-Shabab, which claimed responsibility for the carnage.


The internal document shows that Kenyan intelligence officers have detailed information about plots and individuals tasked with carrying them out, and that the spy handlers face a continuous threat. Other targeted sites included the Hilton Hotel, the Yaya shopping mall, the office of the prime minister, and possibly the embassies of the United States — which was blown up by al-Qaida in 1998 — and of Britain and Israel.


The SEAL raid in Somalia was only one of two anti-terror missions by U.S. forces in Africa over the weekend. In Libya on Saturday, the U.S. Army’s Delta Force captured Nazih Abdul-Hamed al-Ruqai, known by his alias Anas al-Libi, an al-Qaida leader linked to the 1998 American Embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania.


That raid prompted a warning Monday from a group of Libyan Islamic extremists who vowed to avenge al-Libi’s capture.


In a statement posted on a militant website Monday, “The Revolutionaries of Benghazi, al-Bayda and Darna” denounced the kidnapping, saying “this shameful act will cost the Libyan government a lot.”


The cities of Benghazi, Bayda and Darna are strongholds of Islamic extremists who are carrying out political assassinations targeting political activists, judges and members of security agencies.


“We owe it to God to fight whoever betrayed his country and involved in this conspiracy,” the group said.


U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said Sunday that al-Libi was in U.S. custody. A U.S. official familiar with the case said later that al-Libi was taken aboard a U.S. warship for questioning. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release details.


U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry on Monday defended the capture of al-Libi, saying complaints about the operation from Libya and others are unfounded. Kerry said the suspect was a “legal and appropriate target” for the U.S. military and will face justice in a court of law. Kerry added it was important not to “sympathize” with wanted terrorists.


“I hope the perception is in the world that people who commit acts of terror and who have been appropriately indicted by courts of law, by the legal process, will know that United States of America is going to do anything in its power that is legal and appropriate in order to enforce the law and to protect our security,” Kerry told reporters after meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on the sidelines of an Asia-Pacific economic conference in Bali, Indonesia.


“Members of al-Qaida and other terrorist organizations literally can run but they can’t hide,” he added.


___


Associated Press reporters Matthew Lee in Bali, Indonesia and Lee Keath in Cairo contributed to this report. Burns reported from Washington.


Associated Press



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Top Headlines

Target of SEAL raid planned attacks in Kenya

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Kenya Hoax was a Fake Siege


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 Kenya Hoax was a Fake Siege


Zionist mobster Frank Lowy owns Nairobi’s Westgate mall. He is the same individual responsible for the murder of some 2000 or more people on 9-11, then reaping the rewards through fraudulent insurance pay-outs.


It may be recalled that he conspired in a fully premeditated fashion, this formerly Israeli-based espionage agent, to blow up the WTC complex, as he was part owner, and then attempt to gain consequently multiple billions of dollars, which was largely achieved.


He and Silverstein created the ruse of insuring the buildings twice on the basis of two terrorist attacks, one against each tower. The team of cheats sought originally 7.1 billion, reaping instead nearly 4 billion, an astronomical amount, a monstrous fraud: a case of insurance extortion, one of the highest degree ever to occur.


Destroying his own mall, with top-paying insurance in place, could not be put past this fraudster, since he has a decided history of criminal acts and extortion.


This is a fake shooting. How could it be real? There are no shooters. No bodies of such shooters.


Now, if their bodies are now conveniently buried under the rubble, no matter. There is CCTV footage available in the mall at all times, if nothing else for theft control. Lowy would not have it otherwise, that is unless he himself commits a terror act, as on 9-11, when, then, the cameras would be shut down.


70 or so deaths. The place would be littered with corpses, all fully visible; there would surely be evidence of bullet wounds. There would also be evidence of great damage to the inside of the mall from all that wild, rapid-fire shooting.


Grenades? Not believable. That damage would be massive, and there would be shrapnel wounds clearly evident.


Too, where are these long weapon- and grenade-toting terrorists? Where? No pictures to be found anywhere? And the one who was arrested, not captured, died of his wounds? In this age of raw fakes and great false flag events no shooter, that is no live body, no captured shooter, and/or no corpse of a shooter, killed in the act, means just what it represents. It is the fact that there was no shooting and that the claim of a shooting or massacre is a hoax.


Yet, this one picture alone proves the fraud, that is proves that there really never was a terrorist attack at the mall and that any siege or military presence is propped up based upon a mere drill, rather, mere lies.


It is this picture that is offered as absolute proof of the fake siege. See what is happening. There are three men prone on the ground in miliary/killing position, ready to fire on the invaders. Yet, there are no invaders, there are no heavily armed terrorists, and these troops know this.


kenyahoaxxxx


The camera-man was negligent. Looked what he allowed into the frame:
kenyahoax


It’s their fellow troops or, perhaps, their commanders loitering around right next to the storefront, right where the men for camera-shoot purposes are pointing. The men in firing position are giving the world the impression of a real and present danger. This is obviously a lie.


See it again. As pointed out by Valentine in her BlogofBlogs there are all sorts of people who are nonchalant about the supposed danger, especially the camera-people who show no hesitation to get directly in the line of fire and, in fact, take less precautions that the soldiers.


Yet, look at this. While the men, left screen, are chit-chatting, there is a soldier lying prone only a few yards away giving the impression of an active shooting event in the mall.


kenyahoaxxx


This is clearly not the case to even the slightest degree, as is demonstrated by the body language and attitude of the men who were likely supposed to be off-screen. “Hey, private. Let us know if the terrorists show up and if they really do have guns and live ammo – let us know and we’ll stop yapping and duck for cover. You guys handle it.”


There is also this supposedly iconic photo, all a fraud, all for public consumption: all to create the impression of a real, live shooting event with actual wild-eyed Muslim terrorists. Yet, one look at this photo shows that it is made as ‘iconic’, being used to influence the psyche. They are hiding, taking precautions, while the cameraman is in full view, easy sights, of any real shooter.


kenyahoaxmilit


There is no one to shoot at, so they have to fake it. See the eye roll of the military man, third in line. Regardless, what are these men aiming at? There were no armed militants in that mall, and there isn’t even a single picture/photo/film of any type to demonstrate their existence, which alone is sufficient to call this a supreme hoax.


Yet, what about the bombs and grenades? This, too, is a phony. The cation says that this fire and/or smoke is coming from within the mall. Yet, as can be readily seen that smoke arises from the outside edge of the building. Is this, therefore, a Frank Lowy smoke machine in action, as was used in the Asiana Flight 214 hoax?


4976526-3x2-700x467


Therefore, the siege was a complete fake, fully organized by Zionist mobsters for the purposes of causing world-wide condemnation of Islaam and Muslims. This is the obvious purpose of this hoax, and an elaborate one it is, relying on the entire infrastructure of the Israeli asset and terminally corrupt entity, the Kenyan regime.


Another view showing that, clearly, the smoke is arising from outside, not inside, the building:


westgate-shopping-mall-nairobi


It is said to be a mattress fire. Yet, once again, the appearance is that most of the smoke arises from the outside edge of the building. Needs more investigation.


One more time, this:


kenyahoax


versus this:


kenyahoaxxxx


There is no way in a real shooting the military would put some men in protective and attack positions, while allowing another group of men to put themselves at risk so casually. This is definitive evidence that Nairobi mall ‘shooting’ (that is non-shooting) is a staged hoax.


Then, too, could anything be more staged, more fabricated, than this? Come around that corner, then, like good little servants of the multibillionaire Frank Lowy and his collaborators: do that bidding, point those guns all over the place in the air as if there really is a threat.


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WHAT REALLY HAPPENED



Kenya Hoax was a Fake Siege

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

VIDEO: Kenya Mall Massacre: Americans Among the Attackers?







Al-Shabaab, the terrorist group behind the shootout at the Nairobi mall, has actively recruited in the U.S.













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VIDEO: Kenya Mall Massacre: Americans Among the Attackers?

Monday, September 23, 2013

VIDEO: Kenya Attack: What Is Known









Kenyan forces moved against Muslim terrorists in Nairobi’s Westgate Shopping Mall. Kenya’s interior minister Joseph Ole Lenku said two terrorists were killed as military forces waged an operation to rescue remaining hostages. Lenku said all floors had been secured but the terrorist were still inside.













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VIDEO: Kenya Attack: What Is Known

VIDEO: 59 seconds: Nairobi, government shutdown









The Post’s Emily Heil offers the latest on the Westgate Mall standoff in Kenya, the government shutdown and Emmy winners.













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VIDEO: 59 seconds: Nairobi, government shutdown

VIDEO: 59 seconds: Nairobi, government shutdown







The Post’s Emily Heil offers the latest on the Westgate Mall standoff in Kenya, the government shutdown and Emmy winners.













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VIDEO: 59 seconds: Nairobi, government shutdown

VIDEO: Raw: Blasts, Gunfire Heard at Kenya Mall







Heavy fighting continues as explosions rattle Nairobi’s upscale mall Monday, part of a battle between Kenyan troops and al-Qaida-linked terrorists. Top Kenyan officials say two “multinational coalition” hostage-takers had been killed. (Sept. 23)













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VIDEO: Raw: Blasts, Gunfire Heard at Kenya Mall

Sunday, September 22, 2013

VIDEO: Gun Battles at Kenya Mall; Hostages Still Held







A large explosion rocked the Kenyan mall where Islamic extremists are holding hostages a day after attacking the upscale shopping center and killing 59 people. (Sept. 22)













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VIDEO: Gun Battles at Kenya Mall; Hostages Still Held

Gun battles at Kenya mall; hostages still held








Trucks of soldiers from the Kenya Defense Forces arrive after dawn outside the Westgate Mall in Nairobi, Kenya Sunday, Sept. 22, 2013. Islamic extremist gunmen lobbed grenades and fired assault rifles inside Nairobi’s top mall Saturday, killing dozens and wounding over a hundred in the attack. Early Sunday morning, 12 hours after the attack began, gunmen remained holed up inside the mall with an unknown number of hostages. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)





Trucks of soldiers from the Kenya Defense Forces arrive after dawn outside the Westgate Mall in Nairobi, Kenya Sunday, Sept. 22, 2013. Islamic extremist gunmen lobbed grenades and fired assault rifles inside Nairobi’s top mall Saturday, killing dozens and wounding over a hundred in the attack. Early Sunday morning, 12 hours after the attack began, gunmen remained holed up inside the mall with an unknown number of hostages. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)





Groups of onlookers gather on a road looking down over the Westgate Mall in Nairobi, Kenya Sunday, Sept. 22, 2013. Multiple barrages of gunfire erupted Sunday morning from the upscale Kenyan mall where there is a hostage standoff with Islamic extremists nearly 24 hours after they attacked using grenades and assault rifles. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)





Relatives help a woman at the Nairobi City Mortuary after she identified the body of a victim of the mall attack in Kenya, Sunday, Sept. 22, 2013. Kenyan authorities said Islamic extremist attackers remain inside the upscale Kenyan shopping mall, holding an unknown number of hostages, after killing at least 39 and injuring 150 during Saturday’s attack. (AP Photo/Khalil Senosi)





A line of soldiers from the Kenya Defense Forces run in front of the Westgate Mall in Nairobi, Kenya Sunday, Sept. 22, 2013. Multiple barrages of gunfire erupted Sunday morning from the upscale Kenyan mall where there is a hostage standoff with Islamic extremists nearly 24 hours after they attacked using grenades and assault rifles. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)





Kenya security personnel move to their positions as others stand guard outside a shopping mall in Nairobi, Kenya, Sunday, Sept. 22, 2013. Kenya authorities said Islamic extremist attackers remain inside the upscale Kenyan shopping mall, holding an unknown number of hostages, after killing at least 39 and injuring 150 during the Saturday’s attack. (AP Photo/Sayyid Azim)













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NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — Kenyan military forces engaged in sporadic gun battles Sunday with the Islamic extremists holding an unknown number of hostages inside an upscale Nairobi mall, as officials said the death toll from a grenade-and-gunfire siege a day earlier rose to 59, with at least 175 wounded.


The hostage crisis passed the 24-hour mark and fears rose of a protracted standoff with terrorists using hostages as pawns. Kenyan security forces were seen entering Westgate Mall with at least two rocket-propelled grenades, heavy weaponry for a potential indoor battle with hostages present.


Elite military units were inside the Westgate mall, and volleys of gunfire continued into the afternoon Sunday. Two wounded Kenyan soldiers were seen being carried out of the mall in the morning.


Kenyan security officials didn’t — or couldn’t — say how many people the estimated 10 to 15 terrorists were holding hostage. Kenya’s Red Cross said in a statement citing police that 49 people had been reported missing. Officials did not make an explicit link but that number could form the basis of the number of people held hostage.


Former Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga told reporters at the mall that he had been told officials couldn’t determine the exact number of hostages, amid indications that Israeli military personnel were providing Kenya’s military assistance.


“There are quite a number of people still being held hostage on the third floor and the basement area where the terrorists are still in charge,” Odinga said.


Kenyan security officials sought to reassure the families of hostages inside but implied that hostages could be killed. Interior Cabinet Secretary Joseph Lenku said the security operation was “delicate” because Kenyan forces hoped to ensure the hostages are evacuated safely.


“The priority is to save as many lives as possible,” Lenku said. More than 1,000 people escaped the attack inside the mall on Saturday, he said.


Britain’s prime minister, in confirming the deaths of three British nationals, told the country to “prepare ourselves for further bad news.”


“It’s an extremely difficult situation but we’re doing everything we can to help the Kenyans in their hours of need,” David Cameron said.


More than 175 people were injured in the attack, Lenku said, including many children. Kenyan forces were in control of the mall’s security cameras, Lenku said. Combined military and police forces surrounded the mall in the Westlands neighborhood of Nairobi, an area frequented by foreigners and wealthy Kenyans.


“Violent extremists continue to occupy Westgate Mall. Security services are there in full force,” said the United States embassy in an emergency text message issued Sunday morning advising Americans to stay indoors and close to home.


Somalia’s al-Qaida-linked rebel group, al-Shabab, claimed responsibility for the attack in which they used grenades and assault rifles and specifically targeted non-Muslims. The rebels said the attack was retribution for Kenyan forces’ 2011 push into Somalia.


Al-Shabab said on its new Twitter feed — after its old one was shut down on Saturday — that Kenyan officials were asking the hostage-takers to negotiate and offering incentives.


“We’ll not negotiate with the Kenyan govt as long as its forces are invading our country, so reap the bitter fruits of your harvest,” al-Shabab said in a tweet.


Westgate Mall is at least partially owned by Israelis, and reports circulated that Israeli commandos were on the ground to assist in the response. Four restaurants inside the mall are Israeli-run or owned.


In Israel, a senior defense official said there were no Israeli forces participating in an assault, but the official said it was possible that Israeli advisers were providing assistance. The official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was discussing a classified military issue, would not elaborate.


Israel has close ties to Kenya going back many years. And in recent years, Israel has identified East Africa as an area of strategic interest and stepped up ties with Kenya and other neighboring countries, due to shared threats posed by al-Qaida and other extremist elements. In 2002, militants bombed an Israeli-owned luxury hotel near Mombasa, killing 13 people, and tried to shoot down an Israeli airliner at the same time.


“We have received a lot of messages from friendly countries, but for now it remains our operation,” Lenku said, adding later: “I want to assure Kenyans that our security agencies are fully in control of the situation.”


President Uhuru Kenyatta — who said he lost his nephew and his nephew’s fiance — visited a hospital Sunday where he shook hands and exchanged words of encouragement with victims. M.P. Shah Hospital Chairman Manoj Shah said Kenyatta appeared visibly distraught at hearing the feelings of all the patients.


“He looked at many of the patients who had bullet wounds, who were suffering shrapnel damage. He shook their hands and wished them well,” Shah said.


Shah said his doctors received 128 patients and performed 28 surgeries to remove bullets and shrapnel in the first 24 hours since the attacks began Saturday.


“We have at least two critical patients currently, one with bullets lodged near the spine,” Shah said. He added that many of the victims_and four of the 19 fatalities at this particular hospital_were children.


Kenyans and foreigners were among those confirmed dead, including British, French, Canadians a Ghanaian and Chinese.


A 38-year-old Chinese woman was killed in the shopping mall “terror attack,” the Chinese Embassy in Kenya said in a statement Sunday. Her son was injured in the attack and in a stable condition in hospital, according to the statement posted on the embassy’s website.


Ghanaian poet and former chairman of the council of state Kofi Awoonor died after being injured in the attack, Ghana’s presidential office confirmed. Ghana’s ministry of information said Awoonor’s son was injured and is responding to treatment.


Kenya’s presidential office said that one of the attackers was arrested on Saturday and died after suffering from bullet wounds.


Britain’s Foreign Office said that Foreign Secretary William Hague has chaired a meeting of Britain’s crisis committee and sent a rapid deployment team from London to Nairobi to provide extra consular support.


The United Nations Security Council condemned the attacks and “expressed their solidarity with the people and Government of Kenya” in a statement.


There was some good news on Sunday, as Kenyan media reported that several people in hiding in the mall escaped to safety, suggesting that not everyone who was inside overnight was being held by al-Shabab.


Cecile Ndwiga said she had been hiding under a car in the basement parking garage.


“I called my husband to ask the soldiers to come and rescue me. Because I couldn’t just walk out anyhow. The shootout was all over here — left, right— just gun shots,” she said.


Security forces had pushed curious crowds far back from the mall. Hundreds of residents gathered on a high ridge above the mall to watch for any activity. Police lobbed multiple rounds of tear gas throughout the day at hundreds of curious Kenyans who gathered near the mall.


___


Associated Press reporters Tom Odula and Jacob Kushner in Nairobi, Kenya; Josef Federman in Jerusalem; Louise Watt in Beijing; and Cassandra Vinograd in London contributed to this report.


Associated Press




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Gun battles at Kenya mall; hostages still held