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Thousands warned to leave Kenya’s north after insurgent attacks

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Thousands of Kenyan civil servants were urged Tuesday to leave troubled northeast regions hit by a wave of insurgent attacks, as protesters in the capital demanded greater security.

The warnings by six unions to members to leave the restive areas, as well as the protests in Nairobi, follow a weekend attack which saw 28 non-Muslims executed on a bus.

The executions near the northeastern town of Mandera, whose victims included 24 teachers and three medics, were claimed by Somalia's Al-Qaeda-affiliated Shebab militant group.

Unions representing more than 25,000 doctors, dentists, civil servants and primary and secondary school teachers have advised members to leave the region until security forces can ensure their safety.

"Their lives are clearly in danger," Kenya Union of Teachers leader Wilson Sossion told the Daily Nation newspaper.

"We have already lost enough members of the teaching force and can't risk any further."

The call by unions to leave areas, including the main towns of Garissa, Wajir and Mandera, affects more than 10,00 teachers and 16,500 civil servants.

Map of Kenya locating the Shebab massacre of non-Muslims on a bus at Mandera on November 22  2014
Map of Kenya locating the Shebab massacre of non-Muslims on a bus at Mandera on November 22, 2014
, AFP/File

In Nairobi, more than 100 protesters marched through the city centre, chanting slogans demanding police "stop the killings", before sitting down outside the main government office complex.

Others waved wooden crosses to represent those killed in a string of attacks, amid chants calling for the resignation of the police chief and interior minister.

- 'No job worth dying for'-

Many wore tops with a slogan "Tumechoka" -- "we are tired" in Swahili -- and a message reading, "Mr President, we need your action on security."

"This government has failed to manage security, people are being killed everywhere and we don't see action," activist Boniface Mwangi said.

Security forces kept a close watch on the protesters but allowed them to demonstrate.

Kenya has suffered a series of attacks since invading Somalia in 2011 to strike the Shebab, later joining an African Union force battling the Islamists.

A mourge attendant receives bodies of the victims killed in a dawn attack on a bus  in which 28 non-...
A mourge attendant receives bodies of the victims killed in a dawn attack on a bus, in which 28 non-Muslims were singled out and killed on November 22, 2014, about 50 km from the town of Mandera near Kenya's border with Somalia
Simon Maina, AFP/File

The Shehab said the bus attack was carried out in revenge for police raids on mosques in Kenya's key port of Mombasa.

Professionals working in the largely Muslim and ethnic Somali northeastern regions often come from further south in Kenya, where Christians make up about 80 percent of the population.

Many are angry at what they see as government inaction, with the protest taking place close to parliament, where lawmakers are to debate Tuesday on how best to tackle insecurity.

But the Nation newspaper said in an editorial that repeated government assurances of safety after each attack "are beginning to sound like a stuck record".

"People are hurting. People are wounded. People are angry, scarred and scared, and tired of living in a state of terror," it said.

"The buck stops with the president and, therefore, it is he who must take decisive action to restore peace, security and safety for all in Kenya."

But newspapers also warned that the unions' call to leave would damage the region, with the Standard said it feared a "mass exodus" of civil servants, although also accepting that "no job is worth dying for".

Thousands of Kenyan civil servants were urged Tuesday to leave troubled northeast regions hit by a wave of insurgent attacks, as protesters in the capital demanded greater security.

The warnings by six unions to members to leave the restive areas, as well as the protests in Nairobi, follow a weekend attack which saw 28 non-Muslims executed on a bus.

The executions near the northeastern town of Mandera, whose victims included 24 teachers and three medics, were claimed by Somalia’s Al-Qaeda-affiliated Shebab militant group.

Unions representing more than 25,000 doctors, dentists, civil servants and primary and secondary school teachers have advised members to leave the region until security forces can ensure their safety.

“Their lives are clearly in danger,” Kenya Union of Teachers leader Wilson Sossion told the Daily Nation newspaper.

“We have already lost enough members of the teaching force and can’t risk any further.”

The call by unions to leave areas, including the main towns of Garissa, Wajir and Mandera, affects more than 10,00 teachers and 16,500 civil servants.

Map of Kenya locating the Shebab massacre of non-Muslims on a bus at Mandera on November 22  2014

Map of Kenya locating the Shebab massacre of non-Muslims on a bus at Mandera on November 22, 2014
, AFP/File

In Nairobi, more than 100 protesters marched through the city centre, chanting slogans demanding police “stop the killings”, before sitting down outside the main government office complex.

Others waved wooden crosses to represent those killed in a string of attacks, amid chants calling for the resignation of the police chief and interior minister.

– ‘No job worth dying for’-

Many wore tops with a slogan “Tumechoka” — “we are tired” in Swahili — and a message reading, “Mr President, we need your action on security.”

“This government has failed to manage security, people are being killed everywhere and we don’t see action,” activist Boniface Mwangi said.

Security forces kept a close watch on the protesters but allowed them to demonstrate.

Kenya has suffered a series of attacks since invading Somalia in 2011 to strike the Shebab, later joining an African Union force battling the Islamists.

A mourge attendant receives bodies of the victims killed in a dawn attack on a bus  in which 28 non-...

A mourge attendant receives bodies of the victims killed in a dawn attack on a bus, in which 28 non-Muslims were singled out and killed on November 22, 2014, about 50 km from the town of Mandera near Kenya's border with Somalia
Simon Maina, AFP/File

The Shehab said the bus attack was carried out in revenge for police raids on mosques in Kenya’s key port of Mombasa.

Professionals working in the largely Muslim and ethnic Somali northeastern regions often come from further south in Kenya, where Christians make up about 80 percent of the population.

Many are angry at what they see as government inaction, with the protest taking place close to parliament, where lawmakers are to debate Tuesday on how best to tackle insecurity.

But the Nation newspaper said in an editorial that repeated government assurances of safety after each attack “are beginning to sound like a stuck record”.

“People are hurting. People are wounded. People are angry, scarred and scared, and tired of living in a state of terror,” it said.

“The buck stops with the president and, therefore, it is he who must take decisive action to restore peace, security and safety for all in Kenya.”

But newspapers also warned that the unions’ call to leave would damage the region, with the Standard said it feared a “mass exodus” of civil servants, although also accepting that “no job is worth dying for”.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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