martes, 24 de septiembre de 2013

Kenya Mall Siege: 'Six Britons Killed' - Sky News

Six Britons, including an eight-year-old girl, are among the 62 people killed in the attack on a shopping mall in Nairobi.

Kenyan forces have been battling Islamist attackers in the Westgate shopping centre since Saturday and claim they are close to ending the siege.

Defence Secretary Philip Hammond updated the number of Britons feared dead from four to six, and warned the figure may rise further.

"Our current best estimate is we now have six British nationals who have died in this incident," he said, after leaving a meeting of the Government's emergency Cobra committee in the Cabinet Office.

Smoke rises from the Westgate shopping centre in Nairobi following a string of explosions during the third day of a stand-off between Kenyan security forces and gunmen inside the building
Smoke seen billowing from the shopping complex

"Of the additional two, one is confirmed and another one we believe to be a British national and we are awaiting final confirmation but we are pretty certain we now have six British nationals who have died."

British businessman Louis Bawa confirmed his eight-year-old daughter Jenah and wife Zahira were among the dead.

"The people who did this, they are vigilantes, they are animals," Mr Bawa told The Daily Telegraph.

"They are using religion as an excuse to kill people. Zahira and Jenah were Muslims, but these animals just shot them the same as all of the others."

Mrs Bawa was born in Kenya and moved to the UK several years ago.

A relative, Shakuntna Bawa, told Sky News: "It's very hard, we can't believe it." 

Another family member, Tania Bawa, described the mother and daughter as "wonderful people".

Ross Langdon
Mr Langdon at a TED conference in 2012

Two of the other victims, British-Australian architect Ross Langdon and his Dutch wife Elif Yavuz, were expecting their first baby in two weeks.

Mr Langdon, 33, designed an Aids hospital in Kenya "pro bono" and helped create eco-lodges and socially sustainable tourism. 

Friends said Mr Langdon donated much of his time in Africa for free.

His wife, Ms Yavuz, also 33, was a malaria specialist with a PhD in public health policy from Harvard University.

She had completed her dissertation research on malaria in eastern Africa and was working with the Gates Foundation in Kenya and the Clinton Health Access Initiative in Tanzania.

She recently met former US president Bill Clinton and posted a photograph of the meeting on her Facebook page last month.

Elif Yavuz with Bill Clinton
Ms Yavuz meeting Bill Clinton

"Elif was brilliant, dedicated, and deeply admired by her colleagues, who will miss her terribly," Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton said in a statement.

A friend of the couple, Tasmanian sculptor Peter Adams, said the pair dedicated their lives to working for a peaceful world.

He said they were "agents of change in the best sense". 

"Besides a personal loss for myself, this is a major global loss," Mr Adams wrote on his blog.

He said Mr Langdon "was a colleague and friend who went out into the world as an architect doing wondrous things".

"He designed - pro bono - an Aids hospital in Kenya. In Uganda he designed and supervised a unique eco-village employing only local labour. There is much, much more," Mr Adams said.

In 2012, Mr Langdon gave a talk at a TED conference in the Polish city of Krakow about his sustainable projects in Uganda.

TED (Technology, Entertainment, Design) is a global set of conferences owned by the private non-profit Sapling Foundation, under the slogan "ideas worth spreading".

Police and volunteers run for cover in Nairobi
The gunmen killed at least 62 shoppers and staff during the attack

Mr Langdon told the audience he was inspired by growing up in rural Tasmania, where he was born.

"We milked our own cows, worked the land and grew vegetables and fruit that we lived off," he recalled, in a video of the talk available online.

He said his childhood persuaded him it was better to try to adapt to one's environment than to attempt to change it.

"I thought it might be better to be like a chameleon - able to adapt and change and blend with our environment rather than conquer it," he said.

Mr Langdon worked for several companies before founding his own firm Regional Associates in May 2008.

Regional Associates said on its website: "Profoundly talented and full of life, Ross enriched the lives of all those around him.

"Ross's leadership on projects throughout East Africa was inspirational, and he will be will be very, very sorely missed by us all.

"Our deepest condolences and thoughts are with Ross and Elif's families at this very difficult time."

Other foreign victims of the attack are from China, Ghana, France, the Netherlands and Canada.

:: A helpline has been set up for people in the UK who are concerned about relatives in Kenya: 020 7008 000. 

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