Xaaji Xunjuf Posted October 15, 2012 Kenyan official killed in 'secessionist violence' Oscar Mwamnuadzi © was injured in the gunfight in which two people died Continue reading the main story Related Stories Kenya massacres raise fears of poll violence Will radicalism ruin Mombasa's charms? Kenya secessionist group unbanned A local Kenyan official has been killed in what police say is a retaliatory attack for the arrest of a secessionist leader in Coast province. Salim Changu was hacked to death in the coastal town of Kwale, police say. He was attacked shortly after Mombasa Republican Council (MRC) Oscar Mwamnuadzi was arrested during a gunfight at his home, in which two people were killed. Tension has been rising in Kenya ahead of general elections due in March 2013. More than 100 people have been killed in ethnic clashes in the south-east Tana River area since August, in the bloodiest violence since the disputed 2007 presidential election. 'Still illegal' Regional police chief Aggrey Adoli told the BBC that Mr Changu, the assistant chief for the Kombani area, was killed by MRC supporters after going to Mr Mwamnuadzi's house to see what had happened overnight. "It was a revenge attack," he said. Earlier, police launched an operation against the MRC following accusations that it planned to disrupt school examinations. Two of Mr Mwamnuadzi's bodyguards were killed during the raid on his home in Kwale and 38 people were arrested, the Daily Nation newspaper reported. Thirteen people have since been charged - some with possession of offensive weapons, others over T-shirts with pro-independence slogans. They denied the charges but were remanded in custody. In July, Kenya's High Court lifted a ban on the MRC, which the government had outlawed in 2010 after accusing it of being a criminal gang. However, Mr Adoli told the BBC's Focus on Africa programme that despite the court ruling the group was "still illegal". The MRC accuses successive governments of marginalising the ethnic groups living along the coast, which is the centre of the country's tourism sector, and giving land to outsiders. Calls for the secession of the mainly Muslim coastal region tend to intensify in the run-up to general elections, analysts say. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Xaaji Xunjuf Posted October 15, 2012 Kenya is in real trouble they extended their stay in Somalia terrorist attacks continue in Kenya. Kenya coast tourist numbers fall because of the insecurity in the country elections in the year 2013 we all know what happened in 2007 fighting broke out along tribal groups.The Kenya's government is in a war with secessionists in Mombasa. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites