
The assault on the dusitD2 compound in the Kenya capital, which includes a luxury hotel, restaurants, a spa and several office buildings housing international companies, was the most outrageous by terrorists in the country for many years.
On Tuesday night, the US state department confirmed a US citizen was killed in the attack but gave no further details. A police officer in Kenya said at least 15 people had died, but an official death toll has not yet been released. There were reports one suspects had been detained.
Sustained automatic gunfire and grenade explosions were heard as the gunmen rushed in and scores of people fled the scene. On Tuesday evening, the interior minister, Fred Matiang'i, said security forces had secured all of the buildings affected.
"The security teams have evacuated scores of Kenyans and people of other nationalities from the buildings," he said in a brief televised statement. "We are now in the final stages of mopping up the area and securing evidence and documenting the consequences of this unfortunate event."

The alarm was raised at about 3pm on Tuesday when gunfire and explosions were heard at the hotel, in the upscale Westlands neighborhood of the city. Dozens of ambulances, police vehicles and fire engines arrived at the scene as fleeing office workers filled the surrounding streets.
Witnesses said two cars had been driven at speed towards the hotel complex at about 3pm. One appeared to have been used to blast open its gates. Security personnel came under fire before gunmen entered the complex, initially targeting a bank and diners at a Thai restaurant.
Survivors reported hearing a shattering blast and saw people mown down by gunmen as they sat at a cafe. Victims were left lying on tables, bleeding.
"We were changing our shifts, and that is when I heard a loud blast and people were screaming," said Enoch Kibet, who works as a cleaner at the cafe and managed to crawl out a basement gate. "I couldn't believe I was alive. The blast was so loud and shook the whole complex."
Tuesday's attack came exactly three years after a deadly al-Shabaab attack on a Kenyan military base in El-Adde in Somalia, in which about 140 Kenya soldiers were killed.
"Al-Shabaab mujahideen snipers are in operation in Nairobi, the capital of Kenya. Our reports confirm that mujahideen fighters stormed the target building," the al-Shabaab statement said.

Others described office workers in the complex hiding under the desks or sheltering behind makeshift barricades. Hundreds were evacuated from nearby buildings. Rashid Abdi, an expert in Islamic militancy in east Africa with the International Crisis Group in Nairobi, said al-Shabaab was a versatile and patient organization.
"It was always a matter of when not it. There has been some successes against al-Shabaab in northen Kenya but if we have learned anything it is that al-Shabaab lulls security services into complacency. Months and years can go between attacks and then they strike."
Though the Kenyan deployment in Somalia is one motive for al-Shabaab's attacks in Nairobi and elsewhere, the organization is also committed to the broader causes of global jihadi ideology and sees the Kenyan capital as a key target.

On April 2nd 2015, al-Shabaab killed 148 people at a university in Garissa, eastern Kenya. Islamic State has a small presence in the Horn of Africa. Nairobi is the economic hub of the east Africa region with a big presence of western companies, diplomats and tourists. Kenya has long been a significant security partner of the US and other western countries.
Authorities said they had been vigilant over the Christmas and New Year holiday season. "Hotels and other public buildings remain under close watch. Reports from throughout the country indicate that everything remains calm and normal," Kenya's inspector general of police, Joseph Boinnet, told reporters.
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