In the aftermath of the continuous Western media coverage of the Paris attacks by ISIS that killed 129 people, the "Black Lives Matter" movement in the United States has raised questions about similar atrocities against black people that are either ignored or receive scant attention.
How many people know or remember that 148 people -- 19 more than in Paris -- were murdered by al-Shabab militants who stormed the dormitories of Garissa University College in Kenya in a siege that lasted 15 hours last April? That horrific event received very little coverage at the time by the international television networks, such as CNN and Fox in the United States, and the BBC in Britain. Certainly the coverage was not as continuous, analytical, or affronted as the reporting of the Paris events, and it did not reflect the same level of indignation.
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/colum...-p---_19239628
How many people know or remember that 148 people -- 19 more than in Paris -- were murdered by al-Shabab militants who stormed the dormitories of Garissa University College in Kenya in a siege that lasted 15 hours last April? That horrific event received very little coverage at the time by the international television networks, such as CNN and Fox in the United States, and the BBC in Britain. Certainly the coverage was not as continuous, analytical, or affronted as the reporting of the Paris events, and it did not reflect the same level of indignation.
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/colum...-p---_19239628
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