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Clashes Rock Kenya Port for Second Day


Muslim men are detained by police officers at the Masjid Mussa Mosque in the coastal town of Mombasa, Feb. 2, 2014.
Muslim men are detained by police officers at the Masjid Mussa Mosque in the coastal town of Mombasa, Feb. 2, 2014.
Muslim youths angry about a police raid on a mosque used by firebrand preachers in the Kenyan port city of Mombasa clashed with police for a second day on Monday, a Reuters witness said.

Smashing Islamist recruitment networks among its Muslim minority has become a priority for Kenya, a country still reeling from a September raid by Somali militants on a luxury shopping mall in Nairobi. At least 67 people were killed.

Police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at the protesters who were hurling rocks and shouting “release our brothers” in reference to more than 100 people the police arrested after violent clashes in the same area on Sunday.

Kenyan police stormed the Masjid Mussa mosque in the city's run-down Majengo neighborhood on Sunday after a tip that Muslim youths were being radicalized by Islamists who support al-Shabab, a Somalia militant group allied with al-Qaida.

The mosque has been at the heart of al-Shabab's attempts to radicalize disillusioned young Kenyan Muslims over the past couple of years, security sources say.

Two protesters were killed during the clashes on Sunday, two medical sources at a local hospital told Reuters. A policeman was also critically wounded, a police source said.

Aboud Rogo, one of the mosque's most well-known preachers who was killed in 2012, had been accused by United Nations investigators of sourcing funds and recruits for al-Shababwhile Kenyan authorities charged him with terrorism-related offenses. The United States had also frozen Rogo's assets.
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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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