quinta-feira, 2 de abril de 2015

O Quiz da Morte contra Cristãos Voltou ao Quênia.


Que quinta-feira santa terrível para os cristãos do Quênia!

Eu já falei aqui no blog duas ocasiões em que terroristas islâmicos pergutavam a quenianos se eles eram cristãos ou muçulmanos, caso fossem cristãos, eles eram mortos. A primeira foi em um shopping em 2013, e a segunda foi no ano passado na cidade de Mpeketoni. Hoje, o quiz da morte dos cristãos voltou ao Quênia, dessa vez na cidade de Garissa, em uma universidade. Estudantes eram perguntados quando dormiam se eram cristãos. São três vezes, mas houve muito mais ataques,

Vejamos parte da descrição do ataque terrorista de hoje feita pelo jornal Daily Mail.


Al-Shabaab terrorists interrogated students whether they were Christian or Muslim as they went door-to-door during this morning's early morning massacre at a Kenyan university, killing at least 15 people. 

The group raided the Garissa University campus shortly after 5am local time, overwhelming guards and killing anyone the suspected of being a Christian. 

Kenyan Interior Minister Joseph Nkaissery said that only 280 of the 815 students in the college have so far been accounted for.


Kenyan security officials said one of the terrorists has been arrested after he tried to escape the compound. 

Eye-witness Collins Wetangula, the vice chairman of the student union, said he was preparing to take a shower when he heard gunshots coming from Tana dorm, which hosts both men and women, 150 meters (yards) away. 

The campus has six dormitories and at least 887 students, he said.

The remaining terrorists have been cornered in one of the four remaining dormitories according to Kenyan security officials.  

He said that when he heard the gunshots he locked himself and three roommates in their room. 'All I could hear were footsteps and gunshots nobody was screaming because they thought this would lead the gunmen to know where they are.

'The gunmen were saying sisi ni al-Shabaab (Swaihi for we are al-Shabaab).' 

Mr Wetangula said he could hear the gunmen interrogating fellow students hiding inside their rooms about their religion.

He said: 'If you were a Christian you were shot on the spot. With each blast of the gun I thought I was going to die.'

The gunmen started to shoot rapidly and it was as if there was an exchange of fire, he said.
'The next thing, we saw people in military uniform through the window of the back of our rooms who identified themselves as the Kenyan military.'

The soldiers took him and approximately 20 others to safety.

As they were running, al-Shabaab snipers on top of a three-storey building attempted to gun them down. 

He added: 'We started running and bullets were whizzing past our heads and the soldiers told us to dive.' 

Fellow student, Augustine Alanga, 21, described a panicked scene as gunshots rang out outside their dormitory.

He said he saw at least five heavily-armed terrorists wearing masks. 

He said: 'I am just now recovering from the pain as I injured myself while trying to escape. I was running barefoot.'

He told journalists he crossed barbed-wire fencing to escape the massacre.

Mr Alanga said any students attending morning prayers at the university's mosque at 5.30am were not attacked.


Al-Shabab militants have previously vowed retribution against Kenya for sending troops to Somalia.

The Somalia-based group has carried out several attacks in Garissa and across Kenya, including the 2013 attack on an upscale shopping mall in the capital Nairobi. 

Kenya sent its troops into Somalia in 2011 to fight al-Shabaab militants following cross-border attacks.  

Last month, al-Shabaab claimed responsibility for attacks in the county of Mandera on the Somali border in which twelve people died. 

Four of them died in an attack on the convoy of Mandera County Governor Ali Roba.

Police statistics show that 312 people have been killed in al-Shabaab attacks in Kenya from 2012 to 2014. Thirty-eight people were killed and 149 wounded in Garissa in the same period.



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Certa vez, li uma frase em inglês muito boa para ser colocada quando se abre para comentários. A frase diz: "Say What You Mean, Mean What Say, But Don’t Say it Mean." (Diga o que você realmente quer dizer, com sinceridade, mas não com maldade).