Thirty killed in Nairobi shopping mall attack

The Kenyan government said it was still too early to say who was responsible.
NAIROBI (AFP) - Masked gunmen stormed a packed upmarket shopping mall in Nairobi Saturday, spraying gunfire and killing at least 30 people and wounding dozens more before holing themselves up in the complex.
The attackers were "pinned down" after hours of painstaking evacuations, with police going shop-to-shop to secure the Westgate shopping mall, a security source told AFP.
"The attackers have been isolated and are pinned down in an area on one of the floors. The rest of the mall seems to be secure," a security source told AFP at the scene.
Senior police sources said they believed a well-organised "terror gang" of about 10 people was behind the assault on the shopping centre, which is popular with wealthy Kenyans and expatriates and was packed with around 1,000 shoppers when it was besieged at midday.
An eyewitness told AFP that he heard the gunmen speaking Arabic or Somali and saw the group executing shoppers, in what appeared to be the worst attack in Nairobi since an Al-Qaeda bombing at the US embassy killed more than 200 in 1998.
The Kenyan government, which has troops battling Islamist Shebab insurgents in neighbouring Somalia, said it was still too early to say who was responsible.
"Investigations have begun to find out the perpetrators of this crime. I urge Kenyans not to speculate," Interior Minister Joseph Ole Lenku said in a statement.
Police at the scene said a suspect wounded in the firefight had been detained and taken to hospital under armed guard.
"This cannot be a normal robbery because all the survivors are saying how the group confronted them and opened fire," a senior police official told AFP on condition he remained anonymous.
"We have reports there were up to 10 or so attackers and they appeared to be wearing a similar outfit, and others covered their faces," another police official said. "The pattern of the attack and the way they were speaking to their targets clearly point to a well-planned attack by a terror gang."
As security forces worked to secure a multi-screen cinema complex on the mall's top floor, a police source said it had been confirmed that the attackers were holding at least seven hostages. As darkness fell over Nairobi, their fate was unclear.
Kenyan troops could be seen moving around and inside the shopping centre while special forces had joined the operation.
An AFP reporter said she saw at least 30 people rescued from a toy shop. Dozens of wounded, some of them bleeding children, were stretchered away from the mall.