Kenya Survivor Found in School After Attack Killed 148

Al-Shabab warned of more attacks in Kenya.

She was rescued shortly before 10 a.m., according to Kenyan officials.

Cheroitich said she didn't believe that rescuers urging her to come out of her hiding place were there to help, suspecting at first that they were militants.

"How do I know that you are the Kenyan police?" she said she asked them.

Only when Kenyan security forces had one of her teachers appeal to her did she come out, she said.

"I was just praying to my God," Cheroitich, a Christian, said of her ordeal.

Cheroitich appeared tired and thirsty, sipping on yoghurt and a soft drink, but otherwise seemed in good health.

She said she drank a lotion because she was so thirsty and hungry while in hiding.

The good news that Cheroitich survived the attack came as grieving Kenyans gathered in Nairobi to view the bodies of family members killed in the Garissa attack.

Five people have been arrested on suspicion of involvement in the Garissa attack, a Kenyan official said.

The three arrests brings to five the number of suspects arrested in relation to the Garissa attack as two suspects were arrested at the college.

The Islamic militant group issued a statement which said the attack on Garissa college was in retaliation for killings carried out by Kenyan troops fighting the rebels in Somalia.

The attack on the college in northeastern Kenya on Thursday killed 148 people.

"No amount of precaution of safety measures will be able to guarantee your safety, thwart another attack or prevent another bloodbath," said the statement.

"Kenyan cities will run red with blood ... This will be a long, gruesome war of which you, the Kenyan public, are its first casualties," said the statement, issued on Shabab affiliated webites and Twitter accounts.