Yorkshire Post

Improvised bombs kill eight Kenyan police officers near border with Somalia

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EIGHT KENYAN police officers were killed when their vehicles ran over improvised bombs in two separate incidents near the border with Somalia, officials said.

The dead included a personal bodyguard for a local governor whose convoy was targeted.

The deaths came a day after Kenya’s police chief Joseph Boinnet announced that al-Shabab extremists based in Somalia were stepping up attacks inside the country.

He said al-Shabab is under pressure from African Union troops supporting Somalia’s government, which recently declared a new offensive against the extremist group.

In the first incident, a police vehicle heading toward the border town of Liboi was blown apart by an improvised explosive device, North Eastern Regional Coordinato­r Mohamud Saleh said.

Later on Wednesday, the governor of Mandera County, Ali Roba, said in a Facebook posting that five members of his security detail were killed when their vehicle was struck by a bomb. The dead included his personal bodyguard. Two other officers were injured in the attacks. Al-Shabab, which has ties to al Qaeda, claimed responsibi­lity for the first attack in a report by its news agency, saying it had killed at least five Kenyan police officers, according to the SITE Intelligen­ce Group, which monitors extremists.

In the last two weeks, attacks by al-Shabab in Kenya’s Garissa and Mandera counties have increased after a lull.

Last week, an improvised bomb killed four people in a vehicle, including a child.

Mandera County has been hardest hit in recent years by an al-Shabab campaign to avenge Kenyan troop presence in Somalia since 2011. Kenya’s troops are part of the AU force there.

Kenya has stopped the frequency of al-Shabab attacks in its capital, Nairobi, and major towns, but human rights groups say the government uses methods such as extra-judicial killings that can fuel revenge attacks.

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