
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — The militant group behind the takeover of a Nairobi mall claimed Wednesday that Kenyan government assault team carried out “a demolition” of the building, burying 137 hostages in rubble. A government spokesman denied the claim and said Kenyan forces were clearing all rooms, firing as they moved and encountering no one.
In a series of tweets from a Twitter account believed to be genuine,
al-Shabab also said that “having failed to defeat the mujahedeen inside
the mall, the Kenyan government disseminated chemical gases to end the
siege.” It did not specify which gases, which could theoretically
include anything from tear gas to poison.
Government spokesman Manoah Esipisu told The Associated Press that no
chemical weapons were used, that the collapse of floors in the mall was
caused by a fire set by the terrorists and that the official civilian
death toll remains 61.
“Al-Shabab is known for wild allegations and there is absolutely no
truth to what they're saying,” he said. But officials said the death
count will likely rise. Estimates varied between only a few bodies to
dozens of bodies possibly still inside the mall.
In another development, a British man was arrested in Kenya following the terrorist attack, Britain's Foreign Office said.
The agency said in a statement Wednesday that British officials are
ready to provide assistance to the man. Officials would not provide his
name or details. He is believed to be in his 30s. Britain's Daily Mail
newspaper said he was arrested Monday as he tried to board a flight from
Nairobi to Turkey with a bruised face and while acting suspiciously.
President Uhuru Kenyatta told the nation the night before the
terrorists had been defeated and declared three days of national
mourning beginning on Wednesday.
Esipisu said floors of the mall collapsed after a fire started by the
al-Shabab attackers caused structural weakness in a 3rd floor parking
lot, which then came down onto the second floor and brought it down onto
the first, or ground floor. He said there were known to be eight
civilians in the rubble, which were included in the government's
official death estimate. There could be several terrorists also buried,
he said.
At the mall Wednesday morning, gunshots could be heard. Esipisu said
they were from Kenyan forces going room to room in the large Westgate
Mall, firing protectively before entering unknown territory.
“During sanitization once you take control of the place if you go to a
room where you haven't visited before you shoot first to make sure you
aren't walking into an ambush,” he said. “But there hasn't been any
gunfire from the terrorists for more than 36 hours.”
The Kenyan government said forensic experts from the United States,
Britain and Israel would be assisting them in their investigation of the
attack.
“The mall is sealed off. It is a crime scene,” Esipisu said.
The process of retrieving bodies from inside the mall still had not
begun Wednesday morning — possibly indicating that the situation was not
yet considered secure — though a city morgue official said his workers
were preparing to go into the building soon.
The attack claimed by Somali militant group al-Shabab killed at least
61 civilians, six security officers and five extremists, the president
said.
Another 175 people were injured, including more than 60 who remain hospitalized.
Fears persisted that some of the attackers could still be alive and
loose inside the rubble of the mall, a vast complex that had shops for
retailers like Bose, Nike and Adidas, as well as banks, restaurants and a
casino.
A high-ranking security official involved in the investigations said it
would take time to search the whole mall before declaring that the
terrorist threat had been crushed. That official insisted on anonymity
in order to discuss information not publicly disclosed.
Eleven other suspects have been taken into custody, and Esipisu said:
“At this at this point the interrogations are ongoing and I can't reveal
any of the details.”
Al-Shabab, whose name means “The Youth” in Arabic, first began
threatening Kenya with a major terror attack in late 2011, after Kenya
sent troops into Somalia following a spate of kidnappings of Westerners
inside Kenya.
The al-Shabab extremists stormed the mall on Saturday, throwing grenades and firing on civilians.
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