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Kenyan police fire teargas in Mombasa, tensions rise

Kenyan security forces patrol the streets during demonstrations following the shooting and killing of Aboud Rogo Mohammed, in Kenya's coastal city of Mombasa, August 27, 2012. REUTERS/Joseph Okanga

(Reuters) – Kenyan anti-riot police fired teargas at stone-throwing youths in the port city of Mombasa on Tuesday in a new outburst of violence a day after the murder of a Muslim cleric led to riots that left one person dead.

Kenyan security forces patrol the streets during demonstrations following the shooting and killing of Aboud Rogo Mohammed, in Kenya’s coastal city of Mombasa, August 27, 2012. REUTERS/Joseph Okanga

Youths barricaded several streets with burning tires in the predominantly Muslim Majengo neighborhood, before armed police dispersed the crowds and patrolled the streets. Most shops in the business district were shut.

“These people, the police, are joking. They are taking this thing lightly, but the way I see it, it will not be good,” shop keeper Kassim Ali told Reuters as police cleared a smoldering roadblock.

On Monday gunmen shot dead Muslim cleric Aboud Rogo, spraying his car with bullets in a killing many Muslims in Mombasa have blamed on the police. One person was killed in the ensuing unrest.

Washington and Nairobi had both accused the controversial preacher of helping al Shabaab, Somalia’s Islamist rebel group.

The al Qaeda-linked militant group called on Kenyan Muslims on Tuesday to protect their religion at all costs and boycott next year’s presidential election, and condemned what it said was a “witch-hunt” against Muslims by the Kenyan authorities.

“Muslims must take the matter into their own hands, stand united against the Kuffar (non-believers) and take all necessary measures to protect their religion, their honor, their property and their lives from the enemies of Islam,” al Shabaab said in a statement posted on the social media site Twitter.

(Additional reporting and writing by Richard Lough in Nairobi; Editing by Duncan Miriri and Tim Pearce)

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