(CNN) -- We're not done yet.
That was the message 
terrorists of Al-Shabaab gave to Kenya on Wednesday, as officials still 
sorted through rubble and clues left in the wake of the recent massacre 
that took 67 lives at a Nairobi shopping mall.
The Somali militant group handed the threatening statement to regional media, which passed it on to CNN.
For four days, starting 
on September 21, Al-Shabaab fighters spread gunfire and flames through 
Nairobi's Westgate Shopping Mall, leaving it partially destroyed, 
stained in blood and littered with bodies.
Members of Kenya's 
government were mute about what they had seen inside after emerging from
 an inspection there earlier this week.
CNN learned that the Westgate mall attackers tortured some of the hostages.
Military doctors said 
militants severed hands, cut off noses and, in some cases, hanged 
hostages. CNN has seen photographic evidence of one dead victim with a 
hand amputated.
In the coming days and 
weeks, members of Parliament are expected to grill intelligence 
officials to find out more about how the attack occurred.
Forewarned?
A number of Kenya's 
Cabinet members and defense officials were warned about the possibility 
that Al-Shabaab was planning to carry out such an attack a year before 
gunman stormed the Nairobi mall, according to several police and 
intelligence sources.
The warnings were made 
by the country's National Intelligence Service as part of regular 
situational reports given to Cabinet members, the inspector general of 
police, members of the National Security Advisory Council and military 
intelligence officials.
CNN has seen an 
electronic version of those reports, which contain an extensive list of 
terror threats from several regions across Kenya over an extended 
period, but they also specify Al-Shabaab posed a threat to several 
targets, including Westgate Shopping Mall.
The news about the 
intelligence warnings comes amid revelations that the mall favored by 
Westerners and tourists was long considered a possible terror target.
Al-Shabaab made 
statements claiming responsibility, including saying on Twitter that it 
sent the gunmen in retaliation for Kenya's involvement in an African 
Union military effort against the group, which is al Qaeda's proxy in 
Somalia.
Kenyan forces killed 
five terrorists, and 11 others are in custody over possible links to the
 attacks, President Uhuru Kenyatta has said.
But an immense amount of
 work remains to learn how Al-Shabaab was able to pull off such a 
well-coordinated and brazen attack. The terror group was thought to be 
badly bruised by recent losses in its Somalian homeland.
Kenyan military intervention
Last year, the Kenyan 
military was part of a peacekeeping force that defeated Al-Shabaab 
forces to liberate the key Somali port of Kismayo.
Since Kenya launched 
attacks against Al-Shabaab in Somalia in 2011, the group has hurled 
grenades at Kenyan churches, bus stops and other public places.
The mall attack was the 
deadliest terror attack in Kenya since al Qaeda blew up the U.S. Embassy
 there in 1998, killing 213 people.
Terrorism experts say 
the attack bears eerie similarities to the 2008 siege of a hotel in 
Mumbai, India, another upscale target with Western appeal. 
Lashkar-e-Tayyiba, a Pakistani terrorist group, held the hotel for more 
than three days, killing 166 people.
 
 
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