Kenyan priest slain in ongoing violence

By  Francis Njuguna, Catholic News Service
  • February 1, 2008

{mosimage}NAIROBI, Kenya - A mob brutally killed a priest of the diocese of Nakuru in Kenya’s Rift Valley amid continuing post-election violence which has pitted rival ethnic gangs against each other.

Fr. Michael Kamau, 42, was killed on a Rift Valley road Jan. 26 because the mob reportedly was avenging a death in their community.

As the violence continued Jan. 28, the personnel from the diocese of Nakuru worked to evacuate church workers trapped in the violence, reported the Catholic Information Service for Africa, a missionary news agency in Africa.

Fr. John Mbaraka, a local priest, told Catholic News Service that Fr. Kamau was a member of the Kikuyu ethnic community and that his attackers were most likely of the Kalenjin ethnic community.

Mbaraka said Fr. Kamau knew his attackers because he used to pay their children’s school fees when he was a parish priest in the diocese of Eldoret.

“It is sad that religious people are killed. We are appealing for Kibaki and Raila to address the impending problems in the country,” said Mbaraka, referring to Kenya President Mwai Kibaki and opposition leader Odinga Raila.

More than 800 people have died and more than 250,000 have been forced from their homes since the Dec. 27 presidential election, in which Kibaki was declared the winner. International observers have claimed the election was rigged. Kibaki is a Kikuyu, the tribe that has dominated Kenya’s political and economic life since independence from Britain in 1963.

Fr. Kamau, vice rector of St. Matthias Mulumba Major Seminary, was to celebrate 15 years as a priest Jan. 30.

Cardinal John Njue of Nairobi, president of the Kenya Episcopal Conference, condemned the killing of Fr. Kamau, saying Jan. 27 that it was unfortunate police have not apprehended those behind the recent killings.

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