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Activist killed as Mungiki returns

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Police clear a road that was blocked by suspected members of the outlawed Mungiki sect on Thursday. PHOTO/HEZRON NJOROGE(NAIROBI)

Police clear a road that was blocked by suspected members of the outlawed Mungiki sect in Nairobi on Thursday. PHOTO/HEZRON NJOROGE(NAIROBI) 

By NATION Team
Posted  Thursday, March 5  2009 at  21:19

The leader of an NGO which organised Mungiki protests that paralysed transport in many parts of the country on Thursday was later in the evening gunned down near the University of Nairobi.

Mr Oscar Kamau King’ara, the executive director of Oscar Foundation, an NGO with links to the Mungiki, was shot dead by unknown assailants, sparking unrest among University of Nairobi students.

Mr Kingára was in the company of a colleague, identified as a former official of the Students Union of the University of Nairobi, who was also killed.

The killing came at the end of a day when Mungiki re-asserted itself with widespread protests, paralysing transport and shutting down some towns for long periods in the course of the day. Sect members blocked roads using hijacked long haul trucks, burning barricades, and stones and forced public transport operators off the roads by intimidation. They also forced businesses to close in many parts.

The worst affected towns were Nairobi, Kiambu, Nyahururu, Nyeri, Naivasha, Embu, Nakuru and Molo, among others. In Thika, members of the public lynched two young men whom they accused of being Mungiki members.

Meanwhile, police early on Thursday moved in to clear the roads and arrested 125 suspects, including 52 in Nairobi, 35 in Molo, 18 in Kajiado and 5 in Naivasha.

Police said known Mungiki members had circulated notes to business people and matatu (public minivan) owners threatening to kill those who did not shut down their business. The sect has in the past beheaded matatu crews to extort money.

Serious threat

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Kenya National Youth Alliance, the political arm of the Mungiki, said it did not call the protests. Its spokesman, Mr Gitau Njuguna Gitau, said: “If our members participated, it was on individual capacity. The two people killed at Thika are thugs and not our members.”

The Mungiki has grown from a quasi-religious organisation advocating a return to traditional Kikuyu values to a large, complex criminal organisation with multiple leaders and rival factions.

On Thursday, Police Commissioner Maj Gen Hussein Ali described “Mungiki is the single most serious threat to internal security today”, adding that the sect was “very vicious” with a blood-soaked history of “beheadings, extortion and carjackings”.

He said Mungiki had “drawn encouragement from the report” of a UN Rapporteur on Human Rights and “pro-Mungiki civil society groups”.

Criminal gang

Prof Philip Alston, the UN official, in his preliminary report, accused police of executing suspects without trial and recommended Gen Ali’s sacking and the resignation of Attorney-General Amos Wako.

Following the criticism and public pressure, the police disbanded a the Kwekwe Squad, a specialist unit set up to stamp out the sect, which was accused of brutality and illegal executions. The police also their softened approach in dealing with the protests on Thursday, with many of the officers confronting the mobs unarmed and focusing on clearing the roads.

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Add a comment (54 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by iceark

    Commentator Narano,your claim that mungiki thrives under protection of kikuyu govt has infuriated me to say the least. 1 Mungiki is not new and it thrived under a decade of Moi's rule 2 The current government is composed of most tribes, we call it a coalition. 3. Kenya police gunned down a human rights activist who rightfully stepped on their toes otherwise arrest and charge would've applied 4.When Kenya finally catches up with you, Mungiki shall be your surname,remember dead men tell no tales.

    Posted  March 08, 2009 03:40 AM  
  2. Submitted by gm1971

    Ali do not expect to be effient and popular at the same time. Do us one big favor. Clear Mungiki not matter the the method, no matter the cost,no matter the colonial masters response. Mungiki beheads, rape, kidnap and exhort. They desrve no mercy. Shoot to kill. It is more civilised than the way they behead innocent Kenyan. Consult Michuki if you must.

    Posted  March 08, 2009 02:18 AM  
  3. Submitted by Omli

    If the Mungiki keep on terrorising the nation then they have a case to answer but yet again all these random killings and disappearing suspects who are later found dead is also too much to fathom. What we need to find out is who really head the Mungiki and seek dialogue with them to end this misery. Shooting them dead will only lead to the now fatherless babies of Mungiki suspects taking up where their fathers left and before we know it, we will have a Palestinian problem in our hands.

    Posted  March 08, 2009 12:23 AM  
  4. Submitted by nkari

    All these crackheads defending mungiki, just wait till they get close to you then you will understand...You will have done a great job of defending human rights by wiping them out! Find all ethnic militia and wipe them out too. If there is any Kenyan so full of his/her ethnicity to the point of feeling they should dominate others, just load them up and do dump them in the Dead sea. Enough has been said about tribalism and I think it is time we brought those who prey on it to justice.

    Posted  March 07, 2009 11:29 PM  
  5. Submitted by BELTANEFIRE5

    REPLY to the post by kaachongo.I sincerly hope that you are not suggesting by the "foreign masters " that anyone in Tthe U.K would like to see Kenya and Kenyans suffer for financial or politicak c gain.We prosecute those in the UK involved in "graft" etc but it is for KENYA to provide the evidence as was seen recently this was not forthcoming.Until people there think tribal rather than KENYAN you will be stuckin the mire.God knows I wish you all well but your future is yours to decide.

    Posted  March 07, 2009 07:23 PM  

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