(i)
TERRORIST
ATTACKS IN KENYA IN 2013
January – June
On 4 January, at 7 pm,
two people were killed and seven wounded in a grenade attack at Dagahale area
in Garissa. The grenade was hurled from a saloon car at a tent where people
were chewing Khat.[1]
A grenade was thrown into a
police vehicle as it drove past a crowd along Ngamia road near the local
District Officer's (DO) office on 7 January 2013. Four people including three
police officers were seriously wounded in a grenade attack on a police car in
Garissa town.[2] On
8 January, one of the wounded, a 22-year old man succumbed to injuries. The
number of wounded admitted in hospital were confirmed as eight people including
four police officers.[3]
On the evening of 9
January, Two grenades were thrown into the World Food Programme (WFP) compound in Mandera Town. There were no injuries reported. The
blast occurred as a group of worshipers were leaving a nearby mosque after
their prayers.[4]
On 16 January, suspected
Islamic militants shot dead 5 people and injured 3 others at a restaurant in
the eastern city of Garissa. Authorities said they believed the gunmen
belonged to the Al-Shabaab group, as the victims included a senior prison
warden, fitting a pattern of attacks against security forces.[5]
Two men believed to be
suicide bombers of Somali origin died on the morning of 17 January 2013 after Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) they had went off in Hagdera refugee
camp in Dadaab.[6]
On 31 January, a blast
injured three Kenyan policemen during the evening in the Dagahalley area of the
northern town of Dadaab. The explosion had targeted a police vehicle.[7]Police
had earlier in the evening recovered two hand grenades.
On 2 February, a KDF
soldier was killed in a blast in Wajir after a terrorist who appeared to know him
hurled a grenade at the man and his girlfriend. The officer was among several
people on a break from the coordinated Linda Nchi operation in southern Somalia
between the Somali military and Kenyan forces against the Al-Shabaab
insurgents.[8]Two
other policemen were wounded in the explosion, while the woman had injuries to
her legs.[9]
On 5 February, an
administration police sergeant was assassinated in Garissa. He had just arrived
in the town from his habitual station in Dadaab when one of several gunmen shot
him in the head. The assailants escaped the scene by foot, with police making
no arrests.[10]
On the evening of 18 April,
four armed men walked into the Kwa Chege Hotel in Garissa and started shooting.
At least six people were shot dead and 10 others seriously wounded.[11]
On 20 April, President
Uhuru Kenyatta directed security chiefs to visit Garissa and thoroughly
investigate rampant insecurity in the area after the killing of ten people in
18 April.[12]Inspector
General of Police David Kimaiyo also ordered regional police chiefs to direct
their investigations on recent attacks and form specialized units charged with
tracking down terror groups operating in the Garissa region.
On 19 May, a suspected
terrorist, Felix Nyanganga Otuko and his wife were shot dead and six police
officers injured during a security operation in Githurai Kimbo suburb, Nairobi
which lasted 12 hours.[13]
The state has been
responding to insecurity through the transferring of senior police officers as
was witnessed in the shuffling of ten senior officers including Bungoma OCPD
Amos Cheboi.
Inspector General of
Police David Kimaiyo announced the transfer of Cheboi at the Police Headquarters.
Nyeri OCPD Kirinya Limbitu was moved to Bungoma
to replace Cheboi while Lugari OCPD John Leshimbiro is the new Nyeri police
boss.Rachuonyo deputy OCPD Bernard Macharia was promoted and named the new
Lugari OCPD while Vihiga’s Lawrence Garama was moved to police headquarters,
personnel division. The new Vihiga OCPD is Mr. Alfred Onyango who was operating
from police headquarters, Vigilance House.[14]
Mr. Elphas Korir, the OCPD
for Teso North has been moved to Vigilance House and was replaced by Lucas
Onyango while the new Laikipia East police boss will be Kipkorir Tum who will
replace Joshua Lekutai.
July—December
On 21 September 2013, armed
gunmen attacked an upscale shopping mall in Nairobi, killing more than 70 people and
injuring more than 150. Hundreds of people were evacuated from the mall.[15]
The attack was thought to be orchestrated by extremists against non-Muslim
Kenyans and Westerners in the area.[16]
Anti-terror police arrested
two suspects at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport after the Westgate attack
who had suspect documents which included an expired passport which did not
belong to one of them.
The Government has reacted
to this by drawing up a ‘Nyumba Kumi’[17]
security plan where one is supposed to know their neighbors and what they do
for a living. The national and county governments have also agreed to formulate
a national disaster template to ensure efficient emergency response. The
integrated national security management structure will incorporate county
commissioners, governors and citizens based on the ‘Nyumba Kumi’ initiative.[18]
The county governments and
the national government have also agreed to partner in installation of an
integrated Close Circuit Television (CCTV) system to combat crime in the country.
This was after a meeting between the Council of Governors and President Uhuru
Kenyatta.[19] The two levels of government agreed to
take immediate steps to link security-related technologies such as CCTV, into
one integrated platform as well as improve community policing, especially in
border counties, to tighten loopholes currently being exploited by people
illegally crossing into Kenyan territory.
Cabinet
Secretaries for Interior
and Government Co-ordination Joseph Ole Lenku, Devolution and Planning Anne
Waiguru and the Chief of Staff and Head of Public Service Joseph Kinyua said
the integrated security framework will involve active participation of
citizens.
The
Kenyan government, through the head of Anti-Terrorism Unit Boniface Mwaniki,
has intensified search for the suspected terrorists who attacked Westgate
Shopping Mall by offering Ksh.500 000 bounty for any information leading to
arrest of two owners of a vehicle which was used during the attack.[20]
Members of Parliament called for closure of
refugee camps after the Westgate terror attack. Mr. David Wafula (Sabot MP) had
asked the House Committee on Administration and National Security to give the
country a status report on refugees in the country since he claimed revelations
by intelligence reports showed that some camps were being used as training
grounds for terrorists. This is because of the talk that some of the terrorists
behind the Westgate Mall attack might have entered the country masquerading as
refugees.
On 26 September, men believed to be
terrorists attacked a police station in Mandera Town near the Somalia border and killed two police
officers, injured three others before burning at least 11 vehicles. They also threw
a Rocket Propelled Grenade (RPG) on the local DO’s office burning it down
before escaping in the 3 am incident.
The attack was the second
one in a day following another one that occurred earlier on Wednesday night in
Wajir Town where one man was killed and four others wounded following an
explosion and shooting. Police said gunmen hurled two grenades at a crowd but
one exploded in the 7 pm incident. And as they were escaping they opened fire
killing one man and injured three others.
One of the attackers was
injured by the grenade that exploded and was later arrested by the police. He
is in custody helping police with investigations. Wajir police boss Isaiah
Odhiambo has tightened security in the town.
Extra-judicial killings in
Mombasa linked to terrorism
On 4 October, Sheikh
Ibrahim Omar and three others were summarily executed in the wee hours of
Friday morning in Bamburi, Mombasa, just a kilometer from where his predecessor
Aboud Rogo was killed last year (2012).at the end of the day, four more people
were killed during protests which followed afterward and the Salvation Army
Church was set ablaze. Police have been pursuing Sheikh Abubakar Sharif alias
Makaburi, a preacher whom they suspect to be behind terror plans at the Coast.
(ii)
CLAN
CLASHES
The North-Eastern Kenya
county of Mandera has been experiencing a spike in inter-clan clashes, with
several deaths recorded in June 2013. Episodes of insecurity, since March 2012,
have affected the delivery of aid to thousands of displaced people as well as
access to basic services. On 23 June, an attack in the village of Choroqo, in
the Banisa area of Mandera, left at least 16 people dead, according to
information from Kenya Red Cross Society (KRCS).
The Choroqo raid followed
an incident in which several people were hacked to death and others shot dead
in Mandera and the neighbouring district of Wajir.
Leaders from the warring
Garre and Degodia clans, both of Somali ethnicity, had on 23 June signed a
peace agreement to stop the clashes, with hefty fines set for those engaging in
violence.
The protracted tensions
and conflict between the two communities largely result from competition for
natural resources and political disagreements over governance issues in the new
devolution structures.
President Uhuru Kenyatta
called for peaceful solution to the clashes in Mandera without necessarily
involving the army. This was because the military option has often been
criticized by human rights groups in Northern Kenya due to associated human
rights violations.[21]
However, a contingent of
Kenya Defence Forces (KDF), General Service Unit (GSU), Administration Police,
regular police and the Rapid Deployment Unit (RDU) were sent to restore law and
order when the clashes were escalating further.
In 28 August, more paramilitary police were
deployed in Moyale Town following fresh inter-clan clashes that left unknown
people dead, injured and others displaced. Police spokesperson Gatiria Mboroki
could not confirm claims by Marsabit Governor Ukur Yattani that up to 20 people
had been killed. This was after the Kenya military forces were deployed to
Moyale in early August following a confrontation between residents and security
forces that left one dead. Several houses were torched in the village attacks
that brought business to a standstill.[22]The attacks were between
Burji, Gabra and Borana. General Service Unit, administration police and
regular officers had also been deployed in these areas.
Since August up to October, families have
been fleeing volatile areas of Baringo in Samburu County due to killings that
started in August. Latest incident was in early October at Simiti village when
a herder and a student were killed by raiders suspected to be Turkanas.
(iii)
GANG
ATTACKS
In April and May, a gang went on rampage in
Bungoma County killing at least 15 people and maiming more than 150 mercilessly.[23] The State bolstered
security but there were fears that it had only led to a lull before more
attacks worse than before began. Politicians from Western Kenya had warned that
it is just a matter of time before fresh round of killings erupt in Bungoma and
Busia Counties.[24]
In May, reprisals attacks arose where vigilantes lynched eight suspects.
President Kenyatta chaired a crisis meeting back then at State House, ordering
top police chiefs to stop the spiraling insecurity in parts of the country. The
meeting was attended by all Provincial Police Officers (PPOs), Provincial
Criminal Investigation Officers (PCIOs) and formation commanders from the
Regular and Administrative police units.
(iv)
CATTLE
RUSTLING
On 3 Feb, six people including three police
officers were shot dead in a cattle theft raid in Ng’aratuko in Baringo County.[25]
On 30-31 March, an elderly man was killed in
Itongo village in Kuria East District following a cattle rustling incident. The incident happened after members of
the Abanyabasi clan attacked their Abairege clan counterparts and made away
with 25-30 cattle from several homesteads.[26]
On 18 September, nine year old boy was killed
in Baragoi cattle rustling incident and over 30 cattle stolen.[27]
0n 3 October four men were killed and several
women and children were injured after more than 200 bandits believed to be from
neighbouring Uganda and Turkana County raided villages in West Pokot.700 cows
were stolen.
During the weekend of 5-8 October, two people
were killed and three others were injured during a raid by more than 100 armed
rustlers at Suyan village in Baragoi, Samburu North. The heavily armed raiders
drove away with over 300 head of cattle.
(v)
ROBBERIES
On
Wednesday, January 09, an expatriate member of the UN staff was reportedly
attacked and shot by an unknown gunmen on Ngong Road after withdrawing cash
from an ATM machine at the Nakumatt Junction supermarket.
On
Friday, January 11, , five Peace Corps volunteers were assaulted and robbed
while walking from the Westgate Mall to the Kenya Continental Hotel.
On
Monday, January 14, an UNEP employee was robbed just outside of the UN Crescent
offices along the Gigiri Lane, across from CAC2.
On
Saturday, February 02, a UN staff member was shot and robbed by five assailants
on Chaka Road, in Hurlingham.
On
Sunday, February 10, a man armed with a knife mugged and tried to carjack
mission employees as they were returning to their vehicle which was parked on United
Nations Avenue at the back side of the Village Market in Gigiri.[28]
On 30 April, Flying squad officers gunned down 4 suspected gangsters
believed to have been part of a gang that attacked a G4S cash delivery van in
Ugunja Siaya on Tuesday and made away with an estimated 6.5 million shillings.[29]
On
20 June, nine suspected gangsters were shot
dead by police in Nairobi in Warren area within Kasarani.[30]
In July, Dr. Jesse Mwangi, an Egerton University
lecturer was shot dead by a gang of armed gangsters who abducted him as he left
a local hotel where he was chairing a wedding committee meeting for one of his
friends.[31]
28 July, seven suspected thugs were killed in
Nakuru robbery attempt. Police shot dead the seven, six men and a woman.[32]
On 8 August, Managers of a Nairobi company shot dead two gangsters who
had robbed their firm near Embakasi along the Eastern bypass in Nairobi. A
third suspect was lynched by the public who caught up with him as he escaped.[33]
On
19 August, three suspected robbers were shot dead by police in three separate
incidents and three firearms recovered in Nairobi.[34]
On
24-25 August, a retired British officer Lt Col David Parkinson was killed after
five robbers raided his farm in Nanyuki.[35]
On
2 September, two suspected gangsters were shot dead by police officers while
robbing a petrol station at Kenlands Estate in Nakuru town.[36]
On
12 September, police shot dead three armed robbers who had strangled to death a
Norwegian national in the lakeside city of Kisumu.[37]
On
18 September, armed gang of five shot and seriously wounded a form four student
at Ngomongo village in Kirinyaga County and also kidnapped the girl’s mother.[38]
On
20 September, three people were lynched by an angry mob in Malindi town on
suspicion of being members of a gang of armed thugs, who have been killing and
stealing from 'boda boda' operators.[39]
On 25 September, 3 suspected thugs were gunned down in
a botched robbery attempt in Korogocho.[40]
On 25 September, two girls, aged between three and
twelve years, were killed during a shootout in Korogocho where police were
hunting down a criminal.[41]
***Kenya security ranked among the worst- DN
15-10-2013 by Ibrahim Index African Governance (IIAG)***
[5] The Miami Herald
(15 January 2013). "Kenya police: Suspected
militants kill 5 people"
[6] "Terror suspects die after bombs
explode on them". The Standard Retrieved 17 January 2013.
[7] "Policemen injured in Dadaab
blast". The Standard Retrieved 2
February 2013.
[8]"KDF soldier killed in a
blast". The Standard Retrieved 2
February 2013.
[9] "Gunmen shoot dead police
officer" Retrieved 5 February 2013.
[10] Ibid
[12] http://www.capitalfm.co.ke/news/2013/04/uhuru-orders-police-to-stem-insecurity-in-garissa/ retrieved 20 April 2013
[13] http://sabahionline.com/en_GB/articles/hoa/articles/newsbriefs/2013/05/19/newsbrief-02 retrieved 11 October , 2013
[15]"Americans among injured in
deadly Kenya mall attack". USA Today Retrieved 21
September 2013.
[16] ibid
[17] A community
policing system adopted from Tanzania ensuring neighbors know each other. President Uhuru Kenyatta has directed County Commissioners to work closely with Governors to
ensure the establishment of the structure at all administrative levels.
[19] http://www.the-star.co.ke/news/article-139121/nyumba-kumi-community-policing-fight-crime retrieved 11 October 2013
[20] http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/africa/2013-10/07/c_132777241.htm Retrieved 7 October 11, 2013
[21] http://reliefweb.int/report/kenya/insecurity-hampers-access-aid-basic-services-northern-kenya retrieved 28 June 2013.
[25] http://www.capitalfm.co.ke/news/2013/02/six-killed-in-kenya-cattle-rustling-police/ retrieved 4 February 2013
[26] http://allafrica.com/stories/201304011314.html retrieved 1 April 2013
[28] http://nairobi.usembassy.gov/crimeincidents.html retrieved 16 February 2013
[29] http://k24tv.co.ke/?p=2702 retrieved 30 April 2013
[30] http://www.capitalfm.co.ke/news/2013/06/nine-suspected-robbers-shot-dead-in-kasarani/ retrieved 21 June 2013
[34] http://www.thepeople.co.ke/16272/police-gun-down-three-suspected-robbers-in-city-operations/ retrieved 20 August 2013
[35] http://www.mail.com/int/news/world/2294660-ex-british-officer-dies-robbery-kenya.html
retrieved 26 August 2013
[36] http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/?articleID=2000092618&story_title=two-gangsters-shot-dead-during-robbery retrieved 3 September 2013
[37] http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/africa/2013-09/13/c_132716184.htm retrieved 13 September 2013
[38] http://k24tv.co.ke/?p=12452 retrieved 19 September 2013
[39] http://k24tv.co.ke/?p=12511 retrieved 20 September 2013
[40] http://k24tv.co.ke/?p=12819 retrieved 25 September 2013
[41] http://k24tv.co.ke/?p=12885 retrieved 26 September 2013
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