Stone-throwing youths have clashed
with the police in the Kenyan city of Mombasa, Kenya's second biggest
city, in a second day of violence prompted by the killing of a
Muslim religious leader accused by the US of helping fighters in Somalia.
Police fired tear gas and warning
shots on Tuesday as youths barricaded streets with burning tyres in the
predominantly Muslim neighbourhood of Majengo.
Youth also threw a grenade
at a police truck, wounding 16 police officers, two of them critically.
Mobs moved around Mombasa's
city centre, taunting police who arrested some of the protesters, who are
members of the city's Muslim minority.
Shopkeepers reported looting in some
areas of Mombasa, a tourist hub and major Indian Ocean port.
The unrest began after armed
men killed Aboud Rogo Mohamed on Monday, spraying his car with
bullets in an attack many Muslims in Mombasa blamed on the police, who
denied involvement.
Rogo was the spiritual leader
of the Muslim Youth Centre (MYC), a group viewed as a close ally of Somalia's
armed Islamist group, al-Shabab.
Churches torched
One person was killed in riots on
Monday when protesters torched some churches, raising fears that the
unrest may become more sectarian in a city where grenade attacks
blamed on Somali fighters and their sympathisers have already
strained Muslim-Christian relations.
Police and Muslim leaders had
described the church burnings as impulsive, not premeditated. On Tuesday,
the gangs of youths appeared to focus their anger more on the police.
Church leaders scrapped plans for a
peaceful march for fear it might incite further clashes in a country where
overall relations with minority Muslims have been relatively good.
The Supreme Council of Muslims in
Kenya condemned the violence, especially the targeting of churches.
"This kind of violence goes
against our faith. The protesters shouldn't hide behind Islam or any of its
teachings," Adan Wachu, the council's secretary-general, said. "These
are criminals and should be treated as such."
Kenyan police appealed on Tuesday to
the public for information on Rogo's killing. Raila Odinga, Kenya's prime
minister, has condemned the "horrific" murder, adding the
government was "committed to bringing whoever was responsible to justice".
Rogo had been accused by the UN of
using the MYC group as "a pathway for radicalisation and recruitment of
principally Swahili-speaking Africans for carrying out violent militant
activity in Somalia".
He is also alleged to have
introduced Fazul Abdullah Mohammed - the late head of al-Qaeda's East Africa
cell, shot dead last year in Somalia's war-torn capital Mogadishu - to at least
one of the men who helped him carry out the twin US embassy bombings in 1998.
The bombings in Nairobi and Dar es
Salaam killed 224 people.
Al-Shabab appeal
Al-Shabab, for its part, urged
Kenyan Muslims on Tuesday to protect their religion at all costs and
boycott next year's presidential election. It condemned what it called
a "witch-hunt" against Muslims by the Kenyan authorities.
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"Muslims must take the matter
into their own hands, stand united against the kuffar [non-believers] and
take all necessary measures to protect their religion, their honour, their
property and their lives from the enemies of Islam,"
al-Shabab said in a statement posted on the social media site Twitter.
The violence could worsen if it taps
into long-standing local grievances over land ownership and unemployment,
as well as calls by the Mombasa Republican Council (MRC) for the
coastal strip to secede.
The MRC said it was not involved in
the unrest.
Prolonged trouble in Mombasa could
hit Kenya's vital tourism industry, already damaged by the kidnappings of
female Western tourists from beach resorts by Somali fighters.
The unrest could also knock trade
and transport to Kenya's landlocked neighbours. Rwanda and Uganda rely on
the Mombasa port for imports of food, consumer goods and fuel.
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