Kenya election: Five dead as Raila Odinga returns home
Five people have been killed in Kenya's capital Nairobi as police broke up crowds of opposition supporters.
At least two of the victims were shot dead, reports said, while others may have been stoned to death by a mob.
Riot police were present but did not use any live rounds, a police spokesman said, blaming the deaths on the crowd.
The
supporters of the opposition National Super Alliance (Nasa) had
gathered to welcome home its leader, Raila Odinga, from an overseas
trip.
On Monday, the Supreme Court is due to rule on the legality
of last month's re-run election, won by the incumbent Uhuru Kenyatta
with 98% of the vote.
The vote was widely boycotted by the
opposition and denounced by Mr Odinga as a sham. He went away on a
10-day speaking tour in Europe and America after withdrawing from the
election.
On Friday, Mr Odinga's convoy snaked through Nairobi to
avoid security forces who tried to block off routes to public grounds
where a rally could convene, the BBC's Tom Oladipo reports from the
city.
Demonstrators threw stones in response. A police truck was
set on fire. Police spokesman George Kinoti said in a statement that
officers had used only teargas and a water cannon.
"No live fire
was used," he said. "We are however aware that sections of the mobs
accompanying the Nasa convoy, looted property and five persons were
killed by stoning in different incidences after having been caught
stealing by enraged crowds."
Mr Odinga has called for a "national resistance movement" to "restore
democracy" following last month's vote, in which turnout was only 39%.
"Today is the day we are launching Kenya as a third republic," he said from his car on Friday, to cheering supporters.
"What you have seen is a signal that a third liberation is coming soon," he added.
BBC
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