A relative is assisted by Kenya Red Cross staff as she reacts where bodies of the students killed in Thursday's attack by gunmen are preserved at the Chiromo Mortuary in the capital Nairobi on Sunday. — Reuters
NAIROBI — Kenya authorities have named one of the gunmen who killed 148 people in a university massacre as an ethnic Somali Kenyan national and law graduate, highlighting the Al-Qaeda-linked Al-Shabaab's ability to recruit within the country.
Interior ministry spokesman Mwenda Njoka said high-flying Abdirahim Abdullahi was “a university of Nairobi law graduate and described by a person who knows him well as a brilliant upcoming lawyer.”
The spokesman said Abdullahi's father, a local official in the northeastern county of Mandera, had “reported to the authorities that his son had gone missing and suspected the boy had gone to Somalia.”
Describing Abdullahi as an A-grade student, Njoka said it was “critical that parents whose children go missing or show tendencies of having been exposed to violent extremism report to authorities.”
Kenya entered the second of three days of national mourning on Monday for those killed in last week's massacre, the vast majority of whom were students. Hundreds had packed Nairobi's Anglican cathedral on Sunday, where Archbishop Eliud Wabukala said Easter services were overshadowed by “great and terrible evil” as police patrolled outside.
“These terrorists want to cause divisions in our society, but we shall tell them, ‘You will never prevail',” the archbishop said.
Somalia's Al-Shabaab militants attacked the university in the northeastern town of Garissa at dawn on Thursday, lining up non-Muslim students for execution in what President Uhuru Kenyatta described as a “barbaric medieval slaughter.”
Although Kenyatta has vowed to retaliate “in the severest way possible,” there have also been calls for national unity. He said people's “justified anger” should not lead to “the victimization of anyone” — a clear reference to Kenya's large Muslim and Somali minorities in a country where 80 percent of the population is Christian. — AP