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Six killed in Nairobi explosions in Kenya | |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Six people have been killed in explosions in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, officials say. | |
Several people were wounded in the attack, which took place in the Eastleigh suburb of the city. | |
Eastleigh is known as "Little Mogadishu" because of its large Somali population. | |
Eyewitnesses said devices appeared to have been thrown towards a bus stop and a food kiosk as people made their way home for the evening. | |
Kenya's Standard newspaper said that the twin blasts went off some 50m (165ft) apart on 11th Street, and some of those caught up in the attack had serious injuries. | |
"We suspect it is a grenade," a local police officer told AFP. | |
Eastleigh has seen several recent grenade attacks, including one in December last year that killed four people. | |
A week ago six people died when assailants burst into a church near the Kenyan port of Mombasa and opened fire on worshippers. | |
Kenya's government has ordered all Somali refugees living in towns to move into designated camps in a bid to end the attacks. | |
Interior Minister Joseph Ole Lenku said the directive had been issued because of the "emergency security challenges" facing Kenya. A refugee group condemned the decision as illegal. | |
Kenya has several thousand troops in Somalia, helping the UN-backed government tackle al-Shabab, who are linked to al-Qaeda. | |
Although no group said it was behind the latest attack, many are blaming it on the Somali militant group al-Shabab. | |
Four members of the group were behind the four-day siege at a shopping centre in Nairobi last September, in which 67 people died. | Four members of the group were behind the four-day siege at a shopping centre in Nairobi last September, in which 67 people died. |
The militants had stayed in Eastleigh before launching the attack. | The militants had stayed in Eastleigh before launching the attack. |
President Uhuru Kenyatta has said Kenya's tourism sector is "on its knees" because of the threat from Islamist militants. | |
Mr Kenyatta met ethnic Somali leaders last week to ask for their help in identifying people they thought may be behind recent attacks in the capital. | |
"We all have a responsibility to bring this to an end," Mr Kenyatta said. |