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Sect members held for murders
25/10/2007 08:21  - (SA)  

  • Cops kill two gang members
  • Kenyan policeman beheaded
  • 'Head' of killer group charged
  • 'Gang leader' up for beheadings
  • Kenyan toddler beheaded
  • Nairobi - Kenyan police arrested eight members of a banned sect, blamed for a string of murders and beheadings, while taking an illegal oath in the capital, said an official on Wednesday.

    The suspects, who belonged to the Mungiki sect, were nabbed in the capital's Korogocho slums overnight on Tuesday, said Nairobi divisional police commander Paul Ruto.

    He said: "The sect members had slaughtered a goat ready to undertake what is thought to be an oath associated with Mungiki.

    "We also recovered other paraphernalia, including machetes, usually associated with the sect."

    The new arrests came as a state-run human rights panel said it was probing disappearances and executions of people, whose bodies had been recovered in bushlands in Nairobi's southern outskirts in recent weeks.

    Residents said uniformed police dumped some of at least a dozen bodies found around Kiserian settlement after shooting them at close range, Kenya's Daily Metro newspaper reported on Wednesday.

    'People have been executed'

    Maina Kiai, the head of state-run Kenya National Commission of Human Rights, said: "We have found evidence that some people have been executed, but we do not know by who.

    "We also have reports that some people have disappeared. We are in a process of collecting data and at the same time probing the incidents."

    Police dismissed the claims, widely reported in local newspapers, that security forces were killing suspects linked to Mungiki, a politically-linked gang that was banned in 2002.

    National police spokesperson Erick Kiraithe said: "This is an outrageous lie. You know this is an election year and people can say anything."

    Once a religious group of dreadlocked youths who embraced traditional rituals, authorities said the Mungiki sect had morphed into a ruthless gang blamed for criminal activities including extortion and murder.

    Since March, the gang had been accused of murdering at least 43 people - beheading several of their victims - mainly in Nairobi slums and central Kenya.

    The wave of killings peaked in June, raising fears of widespread instability in Kenya ahead of general elections due in December, but a police crackdown that killed dozens of Mungiki suspects had since curbed the violence.

     
     



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