Friday, 13 January 2012

Somalia's al-Shabab seizes Kenyan officials in Wajir


In this Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2011 file photo, two Kenyan army soldiers shield themselves from the downdraft of a Kenyan air force helicopter as it flies away from their base near the seaside town of Bur Garbo, Somalia. Al-Shabab has vowed to take revenge for Kenya's incursion into Somalia

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Gunmen have killed six people and abducted three others in the latest attack in the north-eastern border region with Somalia, police say.
The al-Qaeda-linked Somali Islamist group al-Shabab said that it had carried out the raid in Wajir district.
A local police chief told the BBC that two officials were among those seized from the police post in Gerille town.
There have been several attacks since October when Kenya sent troops into Somalia in pursuit of al-Shabab.
The police said six people had died, but al-Shabab said it had killed seven officers and officials and seized several others as prisoners in its surprise attack on Wednesday evening.
"Also seized during the raid were Kenyan vehicles, communication equipment and a cache of weapons," the al-Shabab statement said.
North-Eastern Province police head Leo Nyongesa would not confirm to the BBC if any police officers were killed - despite earlier reports that at least three had died.
He said two government administrative officials - the district officer and the registrar of persons - were among the three people seized.
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Mr Nyongesa said that the attackers threw explosives and shot their way into the police post in the small town of Gerille, approximately 200km (125 miles) north of the Dadaab refugee camp, which is close to the scene of previous attacks.
The latest attack comes as Human Rights Watch warns that Kenyan security forces were "beating and and arbitrarily detaining citizens and Somali refugees" in the Kenya-Somalia border area.
Kenyan army spokesman Major Emmanuel Chirchir told HRW that he did not have knowledge of any abuses, but the military would investigate the claims.
Kenya sent troops into Somalia to pursue al-Shabab, blaming it for a wave of abductions.
The militant group has denied involvement in raids on Kenya's coast last year, which targeted foreign tourists and threatened a valuable industry for the country.
It said the Kenyan incursion was an act of war and it would take revenge.
There have been a series of explosions targeting police officers since October.
In December, two explosions near Dadaab, which is home to more than 400,000 Somalis who have fled conflict and famine over the years, killed at least two police officers and wounded several others.
After two decades of violence of Somalia, al-Shabab controls many southern and central areas of the country.
But Kenyan forces have pushed it back from the south, while Ethiopia and local militias have also gained ground in the west.

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