Christian Teacher Killed, another Abducted along with Muslim in Northeastern Kenya
By Jeremy Reynalds, Senior Correspondent, ASSIST News Service (jeremyreynalds@gmail.com)
According
to a story by Morning Star News, Elly Oloo Ojiema was shot at Fafi
Primary School in Fafi, about 100 kilometers (62 miles) from Garissa.
“The
suspected Al Shabaab militants entered the school compound and right
away fired on the teacher who was teaching the pupils,” one of the
sources said.
The
suspected members of the Somali rebel group kidnapped another Christian
teacher, Joseph Kamau, along with a Muslim teacher who tried to defend
him, the sources said.
Trying
to shield the Kenyan Christian, the Muslim teacher of Somali descent
told the assailants he would die with him, according to a Somali Muslim
teacher who requested anonymity.
“The
Al Shabaab got angry," Morning Star News reported the teacher said,
“and told the teacher, ‘We are going to teach you a lesson for
protecting the infidels,’ and immediately the two were carried away to
unknown destination.”
Ojiema was a member of the Seventh-day Adventist church. Kamau belongs to the Presbyterian Church of East Africa (PCEA).
Before escaping with Kamau, the militants beat Muslims of Somali descent at the school for housing Kenyan Christians.
“We
are sounding a warning to you that we shall not take lightly you who
are accommodating these infidels,” Morning Star News reported one of the
attackers said, according to a local source.
The
incident has increased fears among Christians in Garissa, already on
edge after years of guerrilla assaults by Somali rebels fighting the
government in Somalia.

Kenya Defense Forces personnel have been deployed in the area to defend against Al Shabaab attacks.
“We
are living in a very fragile environment where Al Shabaab attacks can
happen at any time,” Morning Star News reported he said.
Al
Shabaab militants have ramped up attacks on Kenyan soil this month,
targeting Kenyan workers from the interior and security personnel and
increasingly planting Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) along
roadsides.
IEDs
reportedly claimed the lives of at least 10 people, most of them police
officers, in a three-week period starting in late May.
The
attacks have caused an education crisis in Garissa County, on the
border with Somalia, as many teachers have fled the area. Morning Star
News reported the county also lost many teachers after a massacre of 148
people at Garissa University College on April 2 2015.
Rebels
from Al Shabaab, which is allied with Al Qaeda, have launched several
attacks in northeast Kenya since Kenyan forces led an African coalition
into Somalia against the rebels in Oct. 2011. That was in response to
terrorist attacks on tourists and others on Kenya's coast.
Kenya
ranked 18th on Christian support organization Open Doors' 2017 World
Watch List of the 50 countries where it is most difficult to be a
Christian.
For more information visit http://morningstarnews.org/
Photo
captions: 1) Al Shabaab terrorists in training. 2) Al Shabaab have been
killing Chrstians in Keyna and soldiers in Somalia. 3) Jeremy and Elma
Reynalds.
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