Obama: US stands with Kenya at this difficult moment

US President Barack Obama at the White House in Washington, DC, on February 9, 2015. The White House on April 2, 2015 pledged to help Kenya fight Al-Shabaab following an attack on Garissa University College that left 148 students dead. PHOTO | SAUL LOEB |

What you need to know:

  • I know first-hand the extraordinary resilience and fundamental decency of the people of Kenya.

Michelle and I join the American people in expressing our horror and sadness at the reports coming out of Garissa, Kenya. Words cannot adequately condemn the terrorist atrocities that took place at Garissa University College, where innocent men and women were brazenly and brutally massacred. 

We join the world in mourning them, many of whom were students pursuing an education in the pursuit of a better life for themselves and their loved ones.

They represented a brighter future for a region that has seen too much violence for far too long.

We also commend the heroism of the responders who lost their lives in the selfless protection of the students and faculty. 

I know first-hand the extraordinary resilience and fundamental decency of the people of Kenya. So I know that the people of Garissa and all of Kenya will grieve, but their determination to achieve a better and more secure future will not be deterred. And neither will the resolve of the United States.

We will stand hand-in-hand with the Kenyan Government and people against the scourge of terrorism and in their efforts to bring communities together.

This much is clear: the future of Kenya will not be defined by violence and terror; it will be shaped by young people like those at Garissa University College – by their talents, their hopes, and their achievements.

This is a message I will relay to the Kenyan people when I visit Kenya in July. Even at this difficult hour, the Kenyan people should know they have an unwavering friend and ally in the United States of America.