Two sisters in their mid-20s attacked and a church building burned in Kenya
By Dan Wooding, Founder of ASSIST and the ASSIST News Service
MPEKETONI, KENYA (ANS -- March 18, 2015) -- Two
sisters in their mid-20s were attacked and a church building burned last
month in an area of Kenya where Islamic extremists killed at least 13
people last July – including the young women’s father.
According to Morning Star News (http://morningstarnews.org),
Somalis in coastal Kenya’s Lamu County struck 25-year-old Annah after
she answered their knock on the door on Feb. 22 at about 7:30 p.m. in
the village of Hindi, said her sister, Karuiki.
Islamic extremists from Somalia killed their father, Simon, on July
5, 2014. The surnames of all three are withheld for security reasons,
said Morning Star News.
“The attackers made a knock at the door, and my sister decided to go
and open the door, only to be hit with a blunt sharp object near the
forehead,” Karuiki said. “My sister fell down screaming, and I decided
to rush in to help. Just at the door, I was hit on my right hand, and I
fell down.”
Neighboring
Muslims rushed over, and the attackers fled, she said. Annah began
seriously bleeding, and neighbors called for a motorbike to come and
take the women to a hospital.
The assailants spoke the Somali language and broken Kiswahili, Karuiki said.
“As they fled,” she said, “a neighbor heard one saying, ‘We do not
want hard-haired [Kenyan] Christians in our region – they should go back
to where they came from. We shall soon come back again.’”
The rest of the sisters’ family was away at their hometown in central
Kenya at the time of the attack. Upon learning of the assault, their
mother came to them at the hospital in Mpeketoni, about 20 kilometers
(12 miles) from Hindi.
“The neighbors know the attackers, but they fear to disclose them
because they are all Muslims,” said the sisters’ mother, whose name is
withheld. “I have recorded statements at the Hindi police station, but
the attackers have not been brought to book. We want our stories to be
heard with the hope security will be ttightened here in Mpeketoni.”
On
July 5, 2014, she lost her husband when gunmen attacked Gamba and Hindi
in Lamu County. In Hindi, 15 to 20 assailants with guns and knives
killed at least 13 people, including 12-year-old Ken Mangara, area
sources told Morning Star News.
“We have lived a difficult life since the death on my husband,” she said.
Morning Star News went on to say that like those who attacked the
sisters, the assailants in the July 5 massacre also spoke Somali and
Kiswahili (Swahili, Kenya’s national language), and they also said
non-Muslims should leave the area.
Members of the Mombasa Republican Council (MRC), a violent separatist
group claiming political and economic discrimination, work closely with
area Somalis in attacking Christians, an area church pastor said.
The MRC includes Christians, but the Kenyan government has banned it
as a “criminal gang” dominated by Islamic extremists. Members of the
Somali Islamic extremist group Al Shabaab and sympathizers have also
been active in northern and coastal Kenya.
The pastor said supporters of MRC are everywhere in the coastal region, and that it is difficult to discern who is a member.
On Tuesday (March 17) the pastor and 30 Christians from Hindi visited
the area district officer of Hindi to request added security as
Christians want to go back to their farms in accordance with a
government plan, she said. Somalis living in the area and other Muslims,
she said, have been agitating for them to “go back
to their ancestral land.”
Two Christians were also killed on July 7, 2014 in Gamba, 46
kilometers (28 miles) from Mpeketoni, a predominantly Christian town
where gunmen killed at least 57 people in a June 15 attack.
Church Burning
In Maramande, Hindi, on Feb. 28, Somalis set the pastor’s church
building ablaze at 1 p.m.; the same church’s building had been burned
during the violence of July 5, 2014. In January the church had rebuilt
another worship center.
“What I saw, I fell down, my energy gone, and went back telling God
to uphold my soul and to continue trusting in Him for his providence,”
said the pastor.
She reported the fire to Mohammed Lausi, police chief of Hindi sub-county, who promised to provide more security.
“These people do not want Christianity in this area,” the pastor
said. “They want to finish me so that Christianity will not go on here.
But I will continue raising up my eyes to God for help.”
“Violence
in Kenya’s coastal region has accelerated in the past few years,” said
the East Africa Correspondent of Morning Star News. “On Jan. 11 in the
Mombasa area, a gunman shot a Christian dead at the gate leading to a
church building, apparently after mistaking him for the church pastor.
Police reportedly said the assailants could be members of an active
Islamic extremist terror cell in Mombasa blamed for past gun and grenade
attacks.
“Islamic extremists were suspected in the Feb. 2, 2014 killing of
59-year-old Lawrence Kazungu Kadenge, an assistant pastor at Glory of
God Ministries Church in the Majengo area of Mombasa.”
He added, that on Oct. 19, 2013, suspected Islamic extremists in
Mombasa killed pastor Charles “Patrick” Matole of Vikwantani Redeemed
Gospel Church following riots associated with a mosque said to be a
recruitment center for Islamic terrorists. Matole had received death
threats.
Photo captions: 2) First aid workers carry the body of a victim who
was shot dead by gunmen in a church in Likoni, near the port city of
Mombasa, Kenya. 2) Soldiers outside a Kenya church that had been
attacked. 3) An armed guard inside an attacked church in Kenya.
Note: Please feel free to re-publish this and any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
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