Kidnapped Mandera chiefs released after two months: Murkomen

File image of Roads and Transport Cabinet Secretary Kipchumba Murkomen. PHOTO: kipmurkomen/X
Five local Kenyan
officials have been released from captivity, Interior Minister Kipchumba
Murkomen said on Monday, two months after they were kidnapped by suspected
Islamist gunmen in the northeast of the country.
Gunmen believed to be
from the al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab group abducted the village
chiefs, who were government-appointed local officials, in Mandera county in
February near the border of Somalia, where the insurgents are based.
"We decided to
work together with the community, and to work with the county government of
Mandera... and this process has borne fruit," Murkomen told journalists,
according to footage by broadcaster NTV Kenya seen on X.
Local media reported
that al Shabaab had taken the chiefs across the border into Somalia.
Murkomen said the
chiefs were in the hands of Kenyan officials and that they would be
"arriving home any time soon," though he did not say whether he
thought al Shabaab was responsible for the kidnapping, as local administrators
had suspected at the time.
Al Shabaab has been
fighting for years in Somalia to topple the central government and establish
its own rule based on its strict interpretation of Islamic sharia law, and it frequently
conducts cross-border attacks in Kenya.
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