President Kenyatta on Tuesday ordered the establishment of a
commission of inquiry to investigate the Westgate Mall terror attack.
At
the same time, eight body bags were delivered to the City Mortuary from
the ruined mall. The number of those missing has also been revised to
28, although no official announcement has been made.
The
commission, the President said, would seek to address the security
lapses that could have led to the terror attack even as he maintained
that Kenya Defence Forces would not pull out of Somalia.
The
President, who was speaking at the Kenyatta International Conference
Centre during an Inter-Religious Council prayer service for the victims
of the attack, did not indicate when the commission would be set up and
its membership.
It will likely seek to establish
whether National Intelligence Service reports had warned that
Al-Qaeda-linked Al-Shabaab terror group planned to attack Kenya and if
adequate measures were put in place to prevent it.
Interior
Cabinet Secretary Joseph ole Lenku has declined to respond to the
allegations, saying intelligence matters could not be discussed in
public.
Other claims include that elite squads of the
GSU and the military which responded to the attack did not have a common
assault plan resulting to fatalities from friendly fire.
The collapse of a section of the mall and reports of looting have also placed the military on the spot.
IN FOR THE LONG HAUL
A
tough-talking President Kenyatta said terror attacks would not deter
the country’s efforts to stabilise Somalia, adding that KDF was in the
war-torn country for the long haul. (TIMELINE: A history of terrorist attacks in Kenya)
Al-Shabaab
has demanded that Kenya withdraws its forces of face more terror
attacks. “I want to be categorically clear; we will stay there (in
Somalia) until they bring order to their nation. We will not be
intimidated. We will not be cowed. If their desire is for Kenya to pull
out of Somalia, all they need to do is what they should have done 20
years ago which is put their house in order and we shall come back,”
said the President amidst applause.
As he spoke,
forensic teams recovered more bodies. It is not clear whether the eight
bags taken to the mortuary contained different victims.
Earlier
reports said three bodies were taken out of the rubble. One was thought
to be that of a KDF soldier because of the remains of his uniform and a
G-3 rifle similar to those issued to soldiers deployed at the mall. It
was taken away at around 1pm in a military ambulance.
Meanwhile,
the UK High Commission spokesman John Bradshaw on Tuesday discounted
reports that foreign experts had been barred from collecting crucial
evidence.
“None of this is correct. The relationship between the UK Metropolitan Police and the Kenyan CID is excellent,” Mr Bradshaw said.
“None of this is correct. The relationship between the UK Metropolitan Police and the Kenyan CID is excellent,” Mr Bradshaw said.
An official at the American embassy also discounted claims that US experts had been barred from accessing crucial information.
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