Five policemen die in Kenya bomb attack






At least five police officers died in a roadside bomb attack in eastern Kenya, police and reports said Wednesday, as troops inside Somalia pulled out of some bases after Islamist attacks.
Kenyan police chief Joseph Boinnet confirmed “there was an incident where a police lorry hit an improvised explosive device” on Tuesday, but gave no casualty toll.
One senior police officer, who asked not to be named, said five officers were killed in the blast as the truck drove towards Mpeketoni, in the coastal Lamu region.

TOPSHOTS Smoke rises from the Westgate mall in Nairobi on September 23, 2013. Kenyan troops were locked in a fierce firefight with Somali militants inside an upmarket Nairobi shopping mall in a final push to end a siege that has left 43 dead and 200 wounded with an unknown number of hostages still being held. Somalia's Al Qaeda-inspired Shebab rebels said the carnage at the part Israeli-owned complex mall was in retaliation for Kenya's military intervention in Somalia, where African Union troops are battling the Islamists. AFP PHOTO / CARL DE SOUZA
FILE:  Kenyan troops locked in a fierce firefight with Somali militants  during the Westgate mall attack in 2013.  
Kenya’s Daily Nation newspaper also reported five police were killed, while The Standard reported six, and The Star said seven died.
Officials have been reluctant to give numbers of those killed in attacks after Shebab militants stormed a Kenyan army base at El-Adde in southwest Somalia, in the latest incident of an African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) base being overrun by the Al Qaeda-linked group.
A Shebab statement said more than 100 Kenyan soldiers were killed and others captured. Kenya has so far refused to say how many of its soldiers were killed, injured or remain missing.
Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta said in a statement that the Shebab would “have no time to breathe” and vowed revenge.
He is due to attend a memorial service on Wednesday, alongside visiting Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari.
The blast targeting police came as Kenyan soldiers inside Somalia pulled out of some of its bases in southern Somalia.
The army however said it was not leaving Somalia and remained committed to the fight.
“There is a reason that took us to Somalia, which is to liberate and pacify those areas, and the mission is still on,” army spokesman David Obonyo said.
Kenyan soldiers vacated at least two military bases in El-Adde and Badhaadhe, witnesses said, adding that Shebab fighters occupied the bases after the withdrawal.
“Shebab fighters took control of El-Adde after the Kenyan soldiers pulled out,” said Abdulahi Mohamud, a traditional elder.
“Shebab fighters entered without fighting and have started addressing the people. Both the Kenyan and the Somali troops emptied their positions,” said Ahmed Gure, another elder.
 Vanguard

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