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At least 13 people have been killed in overnight attacks on two Kenyan coastal towns, in the same area where 65 people were massacred last month, the Kenyan Red Cross said Sunday.
The Red Cross chief Abbas Gulet said the attacks took place in the towns of Hindi in Lamu county and Gamba in Tana River. According to the Associated Press, #AlQaeda linked al Shabaab militants from #Somalia claimed responsibility for the attacks.
#Kenya has suffered a spate of gun and explosive attacks since deploying its troops in October 2011 to fight al Shabaab militants.
According to the Lamu county commissioner Njenga Miiri, a group of about 15 gunmen raided the Malamandi village of Hindi and started shooting at residents.
Al Shabaab claimed responsibility for killing 65 people in attacks last month on the coastal town of Mpeketoni and a nearby village.
Survivors of those massacres reported how gunmen speaking Somali and carrying al Shabaab flags killed non-Muslims and said their actions were revenge for Kenya's presence in Somalia.
Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta, however, denied that al Shabaab militants were involved and instead blamed "local political networks" and said that the victims had been singled out because of their ethnicity.
The attackers appeared to target Mpeketoni because the town is a mainly Christian settlement in the Muslim-majority coastal region, having been settled decades ago by the Kikuyu people from central Kenya, the same tribe as Kenyatta.
Police also arrested alleged separatists from the Mombasa Republican Council, a group that campaigns for independence of the coastal region, as well as the governor of Lamu county, who is an opposition politician.
The unrest in the coastal region has badly dented Kenya's tourist industry – a key foreign currency earner and massive employer for the country – at one of its traditionally busiest times of the year.
(AP-AFP-Reuters)