Nairobi: At least one person was killed and 16 others injured when a gunmen detonated a grenade in a Nairobi church on Sunday in the latest of attacks in Kenya since it sent troops into Somalia to crush Islamist militants blamed for cross-border raids, media reported on Sunday.
According to reports Nairobi has said that al Shabaab militants, who merged with al Qaeda earlier this year, are behind the surge in violence and kidnappings that has threatened tourism in east Africa’s biggest economy and wider regional destabilisation.
Police said the pastor of the church was concluding the service when a man who had “camouflaged” himself as a worshipper threw the grenade and then ran out into the street.
Some worshippers pursued the man who then drew what police said was a 9mm pistol and fired at pursuers before escaping in a maze of alleys in a busy market and residential area known as Ngara a few km (miles) away from downtown Nairobi.
“One person has been confirmed dead and sixteen others including the presiding pastor were injured. The motive of the attack has not yet been established,” police spokesman Eric Kiraithe said in a statement.
Worshippers carried the wounded to cars that rushed them to hospitals, and later huddled speaking in hushed tones as armed police ring-fenced the church to keep a curious crowd at bay.
“It just happened, we do not know actually how it started but we just heard a blast,” said Hebo Hamala, a church elder.
The blast resembled two separate attacks at different bus stations and a bar in the capital that killed a total of 10 people and wounded many more last month and in October, a week after Kenyan troops swept into southern Somalia.
There have been similar attacks near the border with Somalia since Kenya’s military incursion.


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