Four days of cattle
raids and revenge attacks in northern Kenya have left 75 people dead ©Simon
Maina (AFP)
|
Some 75 people have been killed in four days of cattle raids
and revenge attacks in northern Kenya, the Red Cross said Wednesday.
"Over the last four
days close to 75 Kenyans have died. Is it worth it, and what for?" Kenya
Red Cross chief Abbas Gullet said.
"In the 21st
century, we can't have Kenyans killing one another -- especially these pastoralist
communities who come from a very marginalized environment," he said.
AFP reports:
The violence started in
northern Kenya's Turkana and East Pokot districts, and clashes have also been
reported in the nearby districts of Marsabit, Samburu and Baringo.
In the worst fighting,
gunmen from the ethnic Turkana people are suspected of launching an attack on
Monday against an ethnic Pokot village along the Turkana-East Pokot district
border, an area where there are frequent deadly conflicts between the two communities.
"There were 54
people who have lost their lives from these two communities of Pokot and
Turkana... it is very sad," Gullet said, adding that the dead included
five women and four children.
According to a county
official, the violence started after an attack by Pokot warriors on a Turkana
village in which 100 goats were stolen.
Red Cross teams are
supporting some 350 families who have fled days of clashes.
"These communities,
through their leadership, should come together with common sense and start talking
as opposed to cattle rustling," Gullet said.
Cattle rustling and
revenge killings between rival communities are common in Kenya's remote and
impoverished northern regions, an area awash with automatic weapons.
In December, the UN
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said clashes were
escalating due to harsh drought, as well as tensions sparked by the decentralization of political power.
Last year at least 310
people were killed and more than 220,000 fled their homes as a result of
inter-communal conflicts attributed to competition over land and water
resources, cattle rustling, and struggles over political representation,
according to the UN.
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