Suspected Islamist gunmen attacked Kenyan national police Monday evening in the same county where students were slaughtered in a university attack last month, leading to a heavy gunbattle that left at least five officers injured, authorities said.
Police officers were looking for Al-Shabaab militants in eastern Garissa County when gunmen attacked them on Monday evening, said James Kianda, acting county commissioner.
Police reinforcements responded and fought with the attackers, believed to be with Al-Shabaab. In the ensuing battle, five officers were injured, including two critically, the national police service said.
Details about casualties from the initial encounter weren’t immediately available.
National police and the Kenyan military were conducting an operation against the attackers on Tuesday, the national police said.
The initial group of police officers was patrolling the county’s Fafi and Yumbis areas, acting on the belief that Al-Shabaab fighters were hiding nearby, Kianda said.
Monday’s incident came more than seven weeks after Al-Shabaab terrorists stormed a college in eastern Kenya’s Garissa city and killed 147 people.
In that incident, according to Agence France-Presse, the terrorists separated students by religion — allowing Muslims to leave and killing Christians
Of those killed at Garissa University College on April 2, 142 were students at the university, and the rest were security forces and campus security.