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Violence flares anew in Nairobi over elections

Several reportedly hacked to death

Police confronted demonstrators yesterday during clashes between the Kikuyu and Luo ethnic groups in Nairobi. Police confronted demonstrators yesterday during clashes between the Kikuyu and Luo ethnic groups in Nairobi. (uriel sinai/getty images)
Email|Print| Text size + By Michelle Faul
Associated Press / January 21, 2008

NAIROBI - Several people were beaten and hacked to death with machetes in a Nairobi slum yesterday in renewed ethnic fighting over Kenya's disputed election, residents said.

Elsewhere, police managed to quell more than two days of fierce fighting around a Catholic monastery that killed 22 people and left 200 homes burned in the Rift Valley, 190 miles northwest of the capital Nairobi, officials said.

The reelection of President Mwai Kibaki has tapped into a well of resentments that resurfaces regularly at election time in Kenya. But never before has the violence been so prolonged or taken so many lives.

A government commission says more than 600 people have been killed in violence that erupted after the Dec. 27 election, which opposition leader Raila Odinga accused Kibaki of stealing.

As Kibaki's power becomes more entrenched each day, the opposition's best hope may rest in wrangling a power-sharing agreement that might make Odinga prime minister or vice president. International mediation has so far failed to broker such a deal.

Odinga has called for another "peaceful protest" on Thursday, saying, "let them bring their guns, and we will face them." The protest will take place in defiance of a ban and despite the deaths of at least 24 people in three days of protests last week - most of them blamed on police.

Yesterday's bloodshed in Nairobi's Mathare slum, like much of the fighting since the vote, was between the Kikuyu and Luo ethnic groups, said resident Boniface Shikami. Kibaki is a Kikuyu and Odinga is a Luo.

Shikami said Luos in his street had received notices warning them to leave by nightfall or risk attack. One man staggered past with blood streaming from the stump of his arm, which had been cut off with a machete. The arm was taken by a group of youths and placed on top of a pile of stones barricading an alleyway.

The maimed man, Peter Kyalo, arrived later at Kenyatta Hospital. He said he was warned Saturday night by Luo friends that he might be targeted because he is a Kamba, the same tribe as the vice president, a former presidential candidate who joined Kibaki's government this month.

In a separate incident, around 50 people attacked welder Dominic Owour, a 23-year-old Luo, and tried to cut off both his hands at the forearm, Owour said.

Both men said police watching the attacks did not intervene.

Dr. Njoroge Waithaka said 13 people had been admitted to Kenyatta Hospital from the area around Mathare, mostly with ax and machete cuts on the upper limbs and head.

Filipe Rebeiro of aid group Doctors Without Borders said his organization had treated 10 people for machete and ax wounds yesterday morning alone.

Joshua Omukolong, the area police chief, confirmed at least two people died from overnight fighting. Moses Ogolla, a resident, said he saw four bodies loaded into a police vehicle yesterday morning with deep machete cuts.

"I think it was a gang who attacked them because some bodies, the head had six, seven, eight cuts on it," he said.

Ogolla said that he believed the victims were Luo because he heard relatives conversing in the Luo language. "The Luo guys say they are going to avenge this."

In the Rift Valley, around the Catholic Kipkelion Monastery, fighting since Friday has pitted Kalenjin people native to the area against Kisii and Kikuyus who settled there in the 1960s and 1970s.

Police appeared to have quelled the violence by yesterday afternoon but still were recovering bodies.

A local reporter counted 14 people dead from machete wounds, three bodies stuck with arrows, and five people shot to death.

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