AP
People stand near a bus with windows shattered after an explosion, in Mombasa, Kenya on Saturday.
Three people were killed and scores hurt on Saturday
when two explosions rocked the Indian Ocean port city of Mombasa,
Kenya’s Interior Ministry said.
All the casualties
occurred when a grenade was thrown into a crowd at a bus stop in central
Mombasa about 8:15 p.m. (1700 GMT), Mombasa police chief Robert Kitur
told dpa by phone. He provided no further details.
The Kenya Red Cross reported 21 people were injured.
A
second blast occurred at the Nyali Reef hotel, an upscale resort just
north of Mombasa, Kenya’s second-largest city, but no casualties
occurred in that blast, Mr. Kitur said.
Authorities
have blamed a number of attacks on the Somali radical Islamist group
al-Shabaab. It claimed responsibility for a September attack on a
Nairobi shopping mall, which killed 67 people.
The
U.S. Embassy in Nairobi sent out an emergency message shortly after the
blasts urging all U.S. citizens in Mombasa to shelter in place and avoid
any unnecessary travel.
Small grenade and gun
attacks have occurred regularly on Kenya’s coast ever since the east
African nation invaded Somalia to fight the al-Qaeda-aligned al-Shabaab
extremists. Police routinely blame al-Shabaab and its sympathizers for
the attacks though few people have been charged in court in connection
with the blasts.
Saturday’s bombings occurred despite
a major police crackdown that has seen thousands of people arrested
across the country over the past month. The round-up has been heavily
criticised by human rights groups that say it has targeted ethnic
Somalis instead of criminals.
Numerous radical
Islamist leaders also have been gunned down on the coast in mysterious
circumstances, but the violence has not abated.
On April 1, the controversial cleric Abubaker Shariff was killed and his followers have vowed to avenge the death.
Last week a car bomb at a police station in Nairobi killed four people including two police officers.
Kenya’s tourism industry is heavily dependent on visitors, but has taken a major hit due to the widespread insecurity.