The Kenyan government says it will freeze the assets of those suspected of being involved in the Garissa University College massacre. <br /><br /> One-hundred-and-forty-eight people were killed when al-Shabaab militants launched their deadly assault on the campus, singling out non-Muslims. <br /><br /> It’s also been revealed that relatives will receive compensation.<br /><br /> The government announcements come amid mounting questions over why it took police seven hours to respond to the attack. <br /><br /> There is a feeling that this delayed arrival at the scene could have contributed to the high death toll. <br /><br /> Relatives are also continuing to identify bodies of the victims. <br /><br /> “I don’t have any compassion for the terrorists, because I took my child to school. Today I am taking him dead,” said one bereaved father. <br /><br /> “Actually, I had invested a lot in that child; from childhood, high school to university. I have ran out of cost, even his brothers. I dropped them for the sake of this child because he performed so well,” h