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25.11.2014 Kenya

Kenyan unions warn thousands of workers to leave restive north

By AFP
Bus on which was carried out a dawn attack and 28 non-Muslim passengers were singled out and executed, about 50 km from the town of Mandera, near Kenya's border with Somalia, on November 22, 2014.  By - AFPFileBus on which was carried out a dawn attack and 28 non-Muslim passengers were singled out and executed, about 50 km from the town of Mandera, near Kenya's border with Somalia, on November 22, 2014. By - (AFP/File)
25.11.2014 LISTEN

Nairobi (AFP) - Thousands of Kenyan civil servants, teachers and medics have been warned by their unions to leave troubled northeastern regions hit by a wave of insurgent attacks, reports said Tuesday.

The call follows attacks over the weekend, claimed by Somalia's Al-Qaeda-affiliated Shebab, in which 28 non-Muslims were executed on a bus near the northeastern town of Mandera.

Of those killed, 24 were teachers and three were medics, the Daily Nation reported.

Six unions -- including those representing doctors, dentists, civil servants and primary and secondary school teachers -- have advised members to leave until security forces can ensure their safety.

The call to leave areas, including the main towns of Garissa, Wajir and Mandera, includes over 10,00 teachers and 16,500 civil servants.

"Their lives are clearly in danger," Kenya Union of Teachers leader Wilson Sossion said, according to the Nation. "We have already lost enough members of the teaching force and can't risk any further."

Union of Civil Servants chief Tom Odege said the government had a duty to protect its citizens, and that "when workers are targeted it is an insult to the government."

Professionals working in the largely Muslim and ethnic Somali northeastern regions often come from further south in Kenya, where Christians make up some 80 percent of the population.

Kenya has suffered a series of attacks since invading Somalia in 2011 to attack the Shebab, later joining an African Union force battling the Islamists.

The Shehab said the bus attack was carried out in revenge for police raids on mosques in Kenya's key port of Mombasa.

"We are concerned that very little is being done to improve the security of our members," said Abidan Mwachi from the doctors and dentist union.

But Kenya's newspapers warned the call to leave would damage the region.

The Standard's editorial warning the "call could trigger a mass exodus of civil servants from the areas", while also admitting that "no job is worth dying for."

The Nation warned the already troubled and impoverished northeast would face a "serious health, public service and education crisis."

Hundreds are due to march through the capital Nairobi later Tuesday in a demonstration calling for reinforced security measures.

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