The bodies are laid out on metal
blocks, victims from all walks of life lying side by side amid a stench
of death in Nairobi City Mortuary.Vehicles
drove in and out, from shiny black hearses to beat-up minibuses, to
fetch the dead from the attack by Somali militants on an upmarket
Nairobi shopping mall.
For
many families, the anguished search for loved ones missing since the
siege began on Saturday ended here at the central mortuary.'There were 38 bodies, now only 16 are left,' mortuary superintendant Sammy Nyongesa Jacob told AFP.The
smell of decomposition wafted out of the open windows of the
unrefrigerated morgue, hitting visitors as they entered the car park.

A pathologist's bloodied coat sleeve
was visible through the window as attendants in white disposable
overalls, face masks and latex gloves bundled another corpse into a
waiting hearse.'Yesterday
we were moving around from hospital to hospital looking for him. Now we
are here for the post mortem,' said Alice, widow of 63-year-old David
Muthumbi Karechu, a manager at Bank of Baroda.
'I did not know where he had gone.
Around five on Saturday Mum called me and asked if I had been able to
get in touch with him,' recounted Karechu's eldest son, Zachary.
'It
was when we were watching the news that we started to realise it was a
possibility Dad had been caught up in that attack,' he said.'We
searched the whole of Saturday night and the whole of Sunday,' he told
AFP, adding that his father's body had been brought in on Sunday
afternoon.
'We're trying to bear with the
situation,' said Jane Mwigi, a smartly dressed relative, turning away to
remove her glasses and wipe the tears from her eyes.You go out in the morning and then you
never come back,' said David Nyaboga, another Bank of Baroda manager
who had come along to give support to the grieving family.'It is certainly known that there are more casualties,' he said.
Around the corner in a garden, the family of a chauffeur named Wachiru huddled in a subdued group.
'He'd gone to the mall with the family of his boss. He was a driver,' volunteered Wachiru's youngest son, Mark.One of his older brothers Steven, too distraught to speak, was being comforted by friends and family on a bench.Elizabeth
Akinyi, the family's pastor, recounted how difficult it had been to
break the news to the young man. 'Steven is such a sensitive person,'
she said.
'Wachiru was a dear to everyone,' chipped in an uncle, who identified himself only as Njoroge.
A
diplomatic vehicle ferried in three officials in green reflective
waistcoats identifying them as embassy personnel. They appeared to be
helping with formalities as the body of a British citizen was carried
out to a waiting hearse.
In
the car park, vendors were selling the red streamers that hearses are
required to attach to their mirrors, rope for lashing a coffin to a
minibus roof and flower arrangements.
In a country so often defined by its ethnic and class divisions, Kenyans seemed united in grief.
'Everyone was affected by this attack,' said Sarah Mbone, an elderly woman wearing a tie-dye shawl over a flowery dress.'President
(Uhuru) Kenyatta lost his nephew, and me, just an ordinary person, I
lost my niece,' Mbone said. 'She had popped into the bank.'
Islamic militants who staged the
deadly attack on a Kenya mall said Tuesday that hostages were alive and their
fighters are 'still holding their ground', contradicting Kenyan
officials' claims that they are in a final push. Explosions
rang from the mall in the morning and at midday, and gunfire could also
be heard, despite the Kenyan government assurances of success. Fresh
smoke was seen rising from the upscale Westgate Mall in Nairobi. As
the crisis continued, the morgue braced for the arrival of a
large number of bodies of people killed, an official said.
A government official told The Associated
Press that the morgue was preparing for up to an additional 60 bodies,
though the official didn't know an exact count.
Earlier,
the Kenyan Red Cross confirmed at least 62 people had been killed, but
spokesman Abbas Gullet said it was still not known how many more may be
dead inside the building.
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