NAIROBI: Two policemen were shot dead yesterday at a market in the eastern Kenyan town of Garissa, a base for security forces fighting insurgents in neigboring Somalia.
The policemen, among a group of five officers, were on a routine inspection at the town’s main market when they were attacked, said Garissa police chief George Losku.
“The attackers shot dead two of the officers while the other three engaged the attackers in a gunfight,” he said.
It was not immediately clear if the attackers were connected to Somali militants and their sympathisers, blamed by the government in Nairobi for a surge in grenade and gun attacks in the past year following Kenya’s deployment of troops into Somalia to battle Al-Qaeda-linked Al-Shabab rebels.
Garissa, a market centre for trade in camels, donkeys, goats and cattle located 200 km (120 miles) from the Somali border, is an operating center for the military mission and a target for the insurgency — one of the Kenyan government’s major headaches ahead of a March election.
Kenyan soldiers and Somali forces seized Kismayu, Shabab’s last major urban stronghold in southern Somalia, six weeks ago, driving the militants out.
In July, attacks on two churches in Garissa killed 17. Since then there have been sporadic grenade attacks.
Separately, in the southern coastal city of Mombasa, a man threw a grenade at a local administrator’s office, wounding three people, including the official, police said.
“These are Al-Shabab operatives who ran away from Somalia after the invasion of our forces, especially in Kismayu,” Robert Kitur, Coast region deputy police chief, said.
The attack took place in Kwale, 20 km (12 miles) south of Mombasa, an area known as a stronghold for the separatist Mombasa Republican Council (MRC), which is campaiging for the sec ession of Kenya’s Indian Ocean coastal strip, a tourist and trade hub.
The government has intensified a crackdown on MRC members and supporters in recent months, though some senior members have recently been released on bail.
FROM: REUTERS
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