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Kenya reels from Garissa al-Shabaab attack 44 photos "You know what, there was 9/11. There was July 7th in London. There was (Charlie) Hebdo. There were also warnings there. Right?
Grieving Christians prayed, sang and clapped hands at an Easter Sunday service at a Catholic church in Garissa, a Kenyan town where Islamic extremists killed 148 people in an attack on a school.
Grim history Human-rights abuses by the security forces long predate al-Shabaab. Kenya’s north-east has a grim history dating back to the secessionist war which began in the 1960s.
GARISSA, Kenya -- The son of a Kenyan government official has been identified as one of the gunmen who attacked a Kenyan college where 148 people were killed, authorities said Sunday.
(This story filed in June 4 story, corrects title of Harun Rashid Khator in paragraph 11) NAIROBI (Reuters) - Five men were charged on Thursday in connection with an attack by Somali Islamist ...
Kenya’s Bishops Condemn Garissa Attacks In an April 8 statement, they called on Kenya’s government to increase security and address the issue of terrorism and radicalization of Muslim youth.
This month’s bloody attack at Garissa was Kenya’s worst since the 1998 US Embassy bombing. Al-Shabaab – the Islamist armed group based in Somalia – claims credit for the attack, which ...
Five men were charged on Thursday in connection with an attack by Somali Islamist gunmen on Garissa University in northeast Kenya that killed 148 students, the worst militant attack in the east ...