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Notorious Kenya gang protests against police killings
Thu Mar 5, 2009 2:00pm EST
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By Alison Bevege
NAIROBI (Reuters) - A criminal gang notorious for beheading and skinning its victims staged protests in the Nairobi area on Thursday against the alleged killing of hundreds of its members by police in a crackdown two years ago.
Four people were killed and public transport badly disrupted when the Mungiki gang, which has long run extortion rackets in Kenya's lucrative minibus taxi industry, halted buses in many parts of the capital and forced shopkeepers to stay closed.
Hundreds of people were unable to get to work in Nairobi and central Kenya -- the heartland of the Mungiki. Some minibus drivers said they had been forced to suspend services.
Small shops on the city's outskirts and in several towns including Naivasha and Thika were closed most of the day. Owners said they had been intimidated by roaming gangs.
"In Thika we have heard sad information that members of the public cornered two criminals and lynched them," police spokesman Eric Kiraithe told reporters. Police later said 56 people had been arrested.
Njuguna Gitau, spokesman for Mungiki's political wing, denied the dead were Mungiki and said his group were not involved in any demonstrations. "It is confirmed those are not our people, they were petty criminals," he told Reuters.
A leading local rights activist, citing eyewitnesses, told Reuters two members of a grassroots group protesting against police killings were shot dead by officers in central Nairobi.
Police could not immediately be reached for comment.
U.N. INVESTIGATOR
U.N. special investigator Philip Alston said last week he agreed with a rights group that said police had killed around 500 young men in 2007 in an attempt to wipe out the Mungiki.
Alston accused Kenyan officers of hundreds of other extrajudicial killings, and called for the resignation of the national police chief and the attorney general.
The Kenyan government rejected his allegations -- and blamed Alston for Thursday's protests.
"The Mungiki are back to their extortion and illegal activities because they got the strength when Philip Alston issued that brief that seemed to sanitize their illegal operations," government spokesman Alfred Mutua said.
The U.S. embassy in Nairobi issued a warning to U.S. citizens to avoid a number of potential troublespots.
"Any area where a crowd has gathered should be avoided because it can turn violent and even deadly without notice," it said in a statement. Continued...
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