Islamic Extremists Kill 12 More People in Mandera, Kenya
By Jeremy Reynalds, Senior Correspondent, ASSIST News Service (jeremyreynalds@gmail.com )
MANDERA, KENYA. (ANS-October 29, 2016) -- Islamic
extremists targeted Christians in the shooting deaths of 12 non-local
Kenyans at a guest house in Kenya's northeastern town of Mandera early
this morning -- Saturday, October 29, 2016 -- sources said.
According
to Morning Star News citing the militants’ radio affiliate, Somali
Al-Shabaab rebels took responsibility for the pre-dawn attack on the
guest house, where a Kenyan theater troupe from outside the area was
staying.
An area pastor told Morning Star News that Christians were targeted.
“Some of the students who died had visited my church for Sunday worship and had requested prayers,” he said.
The pastor added that survivors told him that during the attack, the attackers were shouting, “Get rid of these infidel actors.”
The
theater group was made up of university students who reportedly
traveled to the mainly Muslim area of Mandera to perform plays in local
schools.
“This is a deadly attack targeting us Christians here in Mandera,” Morning Star News reported the pastor said.
He
added, “Ten of the people who were killed were university students
visiting Mandera for set-book (curriculum-related) performances at
schools in the county for stage plays for Kenya Certificate of Secondary
Education (KCSE) exam candidates. This is a well calculated attack on
Christians, as this was the last day for the performers in Mandera.”
The
BBC reported that the group's producer said they had received threats.
He told the BBC the gunmen set off explosions, and fired at them
repeatedly as some off the theater members hid in bathrooms.
Earlier
this month, Morning Star News reported, sources said suspected
Al-Shabaab militants targeted Christians in a grenade and gun attack in
the early morning of Oct. 6 that killed six people.
Targeting
predominantly Christian migrant workers from Kenya's interior,
Al-Shabaab reportedly took responsibility for the attack at a
residential compound in Mandera, with a spokesman for the militants
saying it was designed to drive Christians from the area. At least one
of the victims was reportedly a Muslim.
The
attack in Mandera, located in Kenya's northeast corner near the Somali
border, reportedly wounded several others. Among 27 people rescued were
Christians who arrived at their church traumatized and in shock.
“The
loud grenade woke me up, and I heard one of the attackers saying the
‘infidels’ should leave the Muslim area of Mandera,” one survivor told
Morning Star News. “There were loud cries for help as the attackers were
shooting from all directions.”
The pastor of an area church told Morning Star News that two members of his congregation were among those killed in the attack.
Earlier
this year, in a pre-dawn raid on a predominantly Christian area in
coastal Kenya, Al-Shabaab rebels on January 31 killed at least four
Christians, beheading one of them. They have carried out previous
attacks in the Mandera area.
An
attack on a bus and a truck near Mandera by Al Shabaab insurgents took
the lives of two Christians in December 2015, and on July 7, 2015, Al
Shabaab killed 17 quarry workers near Mandera, including several
Christians.
On December 2, 2014, Al-Shabaab killed 36 non-Muslims, most of them Christian, in an attack on quarry workers near Mandera.
Morning
Star News said the killings came after a November 22, 2014 assault by
Somali insurgents in the same area that left 28 non-Muslims dead,
including 19 Christians.
Al-Shabaab,
which has ties to Al Qaeda, claimed responsibility for the Dec. 2
massacre, calling it vengeance for police raids on mosques in Kenya, and
Kenyan military involvement in displacing the Islamic extremist
militants from Somalia.
Prior
to the Nov. 22 attack, police raided and closed four mosques in Mombasa
they said were recruitment centers for Islamic terrorists.
Al-Shabaab
rebels 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 ranks 16th on Open Doors' World Watch List of the 50 countries where it is most difficult to be a Christian.
For more information about Morning Star News, visit www.morningstarnews.org.
Photo captions: 1) Al-Shabaab rebels. 2) Jeremy and Elma Reynalds.
About the writer: Jeremy Reynalds,
who was born in Bournemouth, UK, is Senior Correspondent for the ASSIST
News Service, a freelance writer and also the founder and CEO of Joy
Junction, New Mexico's largest emergency homeless shelter, www.joyjunction.org.
He has a master's degree in communication from the University of New
Mexico, and a Ph.D. in intercultural education from Biola University in
Los Angeles. One of his more recent books is “From Destitute to Ph.D.”
Additional details on the book are available at www.myhomelessjourney.com. His latest book is "Two Hearts One Vision." It is available at www.twoheartsonevisionthebook.com. Reynalds lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico with his wife, Elma. For more information, please contact Jeremy Reynalds at jeremyreynalds@gmail.com .
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