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Kenyan Muslims protect Christian fellow passengers when militants attack bus

Christian and Muslim leaders in Kenya praised a group of Muslims who shielded Christians after gunmen ambushed a passenger bus.

The gunmen, suspected to be part of the jihadist group al-Shabaab, sprayed the bus with bullets, killing two. But when they asked the 62 Muslim passengers to help identify the Christian passengers, the Muslims refused and told the militants to kill everyone or leave.

Defeated, the militants left hurriedly, according to witnesses of the December 21 attack.

The gesture has since united Chris­tians and Muslims in Mandera County, which lies in the country’s northern region along the border with Somalia.

“I think it’s an act of bravery for the Muslims who risked their lives to protect the Christians,” said Anglican bishop Julius Kalu of Mombasa. “This is the true meaning of religion, and we congratulate them.”

Kalu said true religion protects neighbors and defends the weak and the poor. He attributed the development to the recent campaigns around peaceful religious coexistence.

Roman Catholic bishop Joseph Alessandro of Garissa said it was a very positive gesture from the Muslims.

“It shows that even the local Muslims do not support the Islamists’ violence,” Alessandro said. “Now al-Shabaab knows they have no support.”

Ali Roba, Mandera County’s governor, praised the Muslims’ reaction and said some were injured when they refused to be separated from the Christians.

Ali Hassan Joho, Mombasa’s governor, tweeted: “They demonstrated to the world that Islam stands for peace. This selfless act strengthens harmonious and tolerant relations.”

Sheikh Abdullahi Salat, chairman of the Garissa County Supreme Council of Kenya Muslims, said Muslims in Kenya oppose al-Shabaab.

“We have often stressed that we don’t support the militants,” Salat said. “We have insisted we have no problem with our Christian brothers. This confirms it.”

Al-Shabaab has launched a series of attacks in Kenya since 2011, when the country’s army entered Somalia to fight the militants. In 2013, the group attacked the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi, killing 67.

At least 48 people were killed in Mpeketoni in 2014 after militants attacked villages and a town center. Later that year, the militants killed 28 people, mainly Christian teachers traveling on a bus in Mandera County. Weeks later, the group killed 36 non-Muslim quarry workers.

But the biggest attack was in April 2015, when the group massacred 148 mostly Christian students at Garissa University College. — Religion News Service

This article was edited on December 31, 2015.

Fredrick Nzwili

Fredrick Nzwili is a journalist and media consultant based in Nairobi, Kenya.

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