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Laughing Somali gunmen taunted victims in Easter university massacre

A students evacuated from Moi University during a terrorist seige is treated for shock by a member of the Red-Cross in Garissa on April 3, 2015.  Kenya's interior minister vowed that the country would not bow to terrorist threats, a day after the massacre of 147 students by Somalia's Al-Qaeda-linked Shebab fighters.  AFP


AFP/Garissa


Piles of bodies and pools of blood running down the corridors: survivors of the Kenya university massacre described how laughing gunmen taunted their victims amid scenes of total carnage.
Salias Omosa, an 20-year-old education student, said the victims were woken up at gunpoint in Thursday's pre-dawn attack, and Muslims and non-Muslims picked out by "how they were dressed".
"'We don't fear death, this will be a good Easter holiday for us,' the attackers were shouting in Swahili, then shooting their guns," Omosa recounted, still trembling with terror and sitting in the refuge of a military camp.
Omosa managed to escape amid the carnage at Garissa University, after seeing two of his friends executed by the Al-Qaeda-linked attackers, who he said were wearing masks and military-style uniforms.
"I have seen many things, but nothing like that," said Reuben Nyaora, a clinical officer working for the aid agency International Rescue Committee (IRC).
"There were bodies everywhere in execution lines, we saw people whose heads had been blown off, bullet wounds everywhere, it was a grisly mess," Nyaora told AFP.
Nyaora had rushed with colleagues from his normal work with an IRC ambulance team in the giant Dadaab refugee camp, some 90 kilometres (50 miles) away.
He was one of first frontline medics to enter university halls, providing first aid to both survivors and troops wounded in the heavy fighting.
"We were giving first aid during the fighting - and there were soldiers being shot right in front of us, as well as the casualties among the hostages," the 32-year old Kenyan told AFP, his voice trembling.
"Then when we went into the halls, it was too horrible, too awful to imagine, and yet we saw it," he said.
"Everyone seemed dead, but then as we talked, some students who had been hidden for hours came out - some from wardrobes, others from the ceiling, and then others who had lain down with the dead, covered in blood, hidden among their friends who had been killed."
 
Making women 'swim in blood'

He described how he witnessed three women apparently dead, covered head to toe entirely in blood but in fact physically unharmed, pick themselves up from a pile of corpses.
"The ladies said the gunmen had screamed out in Swahili as they shot the men: 'We have come to be kill and be killed,'" Nyaora said.
"Then they told the women to 'swim in the blood'", as though they were making fun of them, playing games and apparently enjoying the killing, he said, before moving on after apparently forgetting to shoot them too.
Amuna Geoffreys, a second year teaching student, was at a Christian prayer meeting when the shooting began, running to hide in a bush. But he could hear the chilling threats of the gunmen talking to colleagues just inside through a window.
As Geoffreys lay in terrified silence, the gunmen inside made his friends call their parents, to blame their imminent deaths on President Uhuru Kenyatta for having Kenyan troops in Somalia fighting the Shebab.
"The killers demanded people to call home and then say: We are dying, because Uhuru has remained defiant to stay in Somalia'", he said.
"After they called their parents, there were shots, and then silence," he said.

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