At least 48 people were killed when
suspected Shebab militants from Somalia stormed into a Kenyan coastal
town and launched a major assault on a police station, hotels and
government offices, officials said.
Around 50
heavily-armed gunmen drove into the town of Mpeketoni, near the coastal
island and popular tourist resort of Lamu, late on Sunday.
Witnesses
said they first attacked a police station, before starting to randomly
shoot at civilians, some of whom had been watching the World Cup in
local bars and hotels.
Lamu deputy commissioner Benson
Maisori said several buildings in the town -- which is around 100
kilometres (60 miles) from the border with Somalia -- were burned down
including hotels, restaurants, banks and government offices.
"There
were around 50 attackers, heavily armed in three vehicles, and they
were flying the Shebab flag. They were shouting in Somali and shouting Allahu Akbar ('God is Greatest')," he said.
Local resident and witness John Waweru, 28, said he lost two of his brothers to the attackers.
"The
attackers came in around 9pm. I heard them shouting in Somali as they
fired around. I lost two of my brothers, and I escaped. I ran and locked
up myself in a house," he told AFP.
VOWED REVENGE
The
fierce gun battles continued until after midnight, but by dawn on
Monday the town of Mpeketoni was reported calm with security forces
saying they were in pursuit of the attackers and authorities recovering
the dead.
"The number of bodies taken to the mortuary
is 47, while one has died in hospital," a local police officer said, as
the Kenyan Red Cross also confirmed 48 people had died.
"Our officers are still combing the area," Kenyan police chief David Kimaiyo told AFP. "It is an atrocity we would not want to see repeated anywhere else."
"We
suspect the involvement of Al-Shabaab in this attack. We are appealing
for calm as we do our best the search for the attackers. It is a very
unfortunate incident."
Kenyan troops crossed into
southern Somalia in 2011 to fight the Shabaab, later joining the now
22,000-strong African Union force battling the Al-Qaeda-linked
militants.
The Shabaab vowed revenge, carrying out a
string of attacks on Kenyan soil, including last September's assault on
Nairobi's Westgate mall in which at least 67 people were killed.
The
town of Mpeketoni, a trading centre on the main coastal road, lies on
the mainland some 30 kilometres (20 miles) southwest of Lamu island, a
popular tourist destination whose ancient architecture is listed as a
Unesco World Heritage site.
Kenyan army spokesman Major
Emmanuel Chirchir described how the gunmen had stormed the town,
overwhelming local police officers, and firing from vehicles "shooting
people around in town."
TOURISTS EVACUATED
Chirchir
also said the attackers were "likely to be Al-Shabaab," although there
was no immediate claim of responsibility from the Islamists themselves.
Military surveillance planes were launched shortly after the attack began.
Attackers
tried to storm a police post including an armoury, but Maisori said
officers had defended the building and fought the gunmen off.
Residents
in villages surrounding the town also reporting that the gunmen
attacked settlements as they pulled out after fighting in Mpeketoni.
"There
are six bodies here, a man and a child in their house, four laying on
the road," said Mohammed Hassan, a local resident of Kibaoni, a small
settlement some five kilometres (three miles) outside the town.
Last
month one of the Shabaab's most senior commanders, Fuad Mohamed Khalaf,
released radio broadcasts urging fighters to strike Kenya.
Hundreds
of British tourists were also evacuated last month from beach resorts
near Kenya's port city of Mombasa following new warnings of terror
attacks from Britain's Foreign Office.
Britain this
week released warnings to citizens in several East African nations --
including Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya and Uganda, who all have troops in
Somalia -- speaking of the threat of attacks at public screenings of the
World Cup.
The Shabaab claimed responsibility last
month for killing two Kenyan soldiers in the same district as Sunday's
attack, although further north nearer to the lawless border zone with
Somalia.
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