Friday, April 3, 2015

The Aftermath Of The Garissa University Massacre In kenya



VOA: Survivors Describe Devastating Kenyan University Attack

GARISSA, KENYA - A day after the horror, this hospital some 200 kilometers from the Somali border has become the central meeting point for survivors of a daylong siege by al-Shabab militants at Garissa University College that left 147 people dead.

Sitting on a shady bench and a wearing a hospital gown, second-year student Quintin Anyango says she awoke early to study in a lecture hall.

Crossing the campus, she encountered several gunmen, and her day took a horrifying turn.

“Oh, I had no hope, I knew that was the end of life since I had no options," she said. "I had nowhere to go.”

More News On The Aftermath Of The Garissa University Massacre In Kenya

Kenya faces the grim aftermath of school massacre -- Washington Post
Inside Garissa University College dorm's scene of slaughter -- CNN
Garissa attack: Bodies still on ground; victims face down, shot in back of head -- CNN
Kenya attack survivor says gunmen had scouted the campus -- FOX News
‘Babe, in case I don’t see you again, just know I love you’: The heartbreaking last message a Kenyan student sent her boyfriend just before she was slaughtered by Muslim extremists -- Daily Mail
Shock, defiance in Kenya after Shebab massacre 148 at university -- AFP
Gunmen Taunted Victims In University Massacre -- SKY News
Kenyans Search for Loved Ones and Answers on Government’s Poor Security After University Attack -- VICE News
Kenya al-Shabab attack: Security questions as Garissa dead mourned -- CNN
Kenya Garissa University attack: President faces fury over 'failure to tackle terror threat' -- The Independent

3 comments:

Unknown said...

Obama's golf game got delayed again!?!

Anonymous said...

Maybe the Americans will get involved in this conflict after their troops catch the brutal Christian terrorist Kony. Yeah.. right.

Unknown said...

They don't want to catch Kony.

Obama set too many restrictions on his capture.

but if they did and they got peace with the Hutu from Rwanda (in Easter Congo), then maybe development could take place. There is oil in Western Uganda. The Ugandans could follow the Brasilian model. You can bring in outside management and technocrats, but they have to train their replacement.