At least 10 people have been killed in the latest clashes in drought-hit
Kenya between rural communities fighting over pasture to graze their
animals, police said today.
Herders from the Borana and Samburu communities fought a gun battle on
Sunday in an area in the centre of the country called Kom, where both
groups had taken their livestock to graze, said Charles Ontita, police
chief of the town of Isiolo.
He said 10 people were killed in the confrontation and two wounded, "but we have deployed more officers there".
The deaths come a week after 13 people were killed in the western
Baringo region when Ilchamus and Pokot herdsmen clashed over grazing at
an area called Mukutani.
On Sunday in Mukutani, four police officers were wounded when suspected
Pokot herdsmen fired on their vehicle as they escorted members of the
Ilchamus community to safety, according to Baringo police.
In response to the spreading violence in both parts of the country
President Uhuru Kenyatta on Friday announced the deployment of troops to
Baringo and Laikipia regions.
Kenya, like elsewhere in the Horn of Africa, is suffering from drought,
but with national elections due in August many suspect that politics is
also at play in the recent violent confrontations.
No comments:
Post a Comment