Three dead, several injured as Mombasa hit by twin attacks

May 04, 2014

At least three people were killed and several others wounded Saturday in twin attacks in Kenya's restive coastal city of Mombasa, officials said.

MOMBASA - At least three people were killed and several others wounded Saturday in twin attacks in Kenya's restive coastal city of Mombasa, officials said.
 
One blast occurred in the busy Mwembe Tayari area of the city centre, and the other close to a well-known beach hotel, the Reef Hotel, in the Nyali area of the city.
 
The Kenyan interior ministry said three people were killed and around 15 wounded in Mwembe Tayari after one or more grenades were thrown into a crowded passenger bus that had just arrived from the capital Nairobi.
 
The ministry also said an improvised explosive device, or IED, went off at the gate of the Reef Hotel, although no casualties were reported. The hotel's management said all its staff and guests were safe.
 
"We had two incidents: one at the bus station where three people have lost their lives. In the second incident that occurred near a hotel in Nyali there were no casualties," a police official told AFP.
 
There was no immediate claim of responsibility, although the city has been on high alert for possible attacks by Somalia's Shebab rebels or local Islamist militants.
 
Muslim-majority Mombasa, a port city that is one of the main gateways to east Africa as well as a popular tourist destination, has been hit by sporadic unrest in recent months.
 
true
The scene after last month's bomb blast at a police station in Nairobi.
 
The city has been rocked by a string of attacks or attempted attacks, with security forces engaged in a major and controversial crackdown against Islamists suspected of being connected to neighbouring Somalia's Al-Qaeda-linked Shebab rebels.
 
Kenya has been targeted by Shebab since it sent troops to war-torn Somalia in 2011. Kenyan troops are still posted in southern Somalia as part of an African Union force supporting the country's fragile internationally-backed government.
 
The Islamist group claimed responsibility for the high-profile attack on Nairobi's Westgate shopping mall last year in which at least 67 people were killed.
 
In March two people were arrested in Mombasa along with a car expertly packed with explosives. Intelligence sources say they believe the car was rigged in Somalia and driven into Kenya for a high-profile bombing.
 
Also in March, six worshippers were shot dead in a church in Likoni near Mombasa.
 
The following week a local firebrand Islamist cleric was gunned down in the city, the third prominent hardline cleric to be killed in or around the city is as many years.
 
The cleric, Abubaker Shariff Ahmed better known as Makaburi, was a vocal supporter of Al-Qaeda and the Shebab and was on a UN sanctions list for allegedly recruiting militants.
 
His killing, however, prompted an upsurge in sectarian tensions -- including fresh violent clashes with Muslim youth -- as well as fresh allegations that Kenyan police are carrying out extra-judicial executions.
 
Kenyan police have also been under fire for an ongoing crackdown in Nairobi which has seen thousands of people detained -- most of them Somalis or ethnic Somalis.
 
The operation has focussed on Nairobi's main Somali district Eastleigh, and residents have accused police of indiscriminately arresting people of Somali origin.
 
AFP

(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});