Shebab Militants Target Kenyan Police in IED Attack
Suspected militants from the Somali-led Shebab Islamist group carried out a bomb attack against Kenyan police on Monday, but the officers escaped unharmed, a Kenyan official said.
The attack took place in the coastal county of Lamu, which borders Somalia and has been hit by a wave of attacks by the Al-Qaida linked group.
Northeastern regional commissioner Mohamud Saleh said a police four-wheel drive vehicle hit an IED (improvised explosive device) while officers were traveling to Lamu from a neighboring county to buy supplies.
He said the vehicle was badly damaged but that the officers had been evacuated to the nearby town of Hindi.
Shebab militants have recently been blamed for a string of security incidents in the Lamu area, including attacks on passenger buses and a failed raid on a military base last month.
The militant group is believed to have fighters operating in the area's Boni forest.
In mid-June 2014 close to 100 people were killed in a series of armed assaults on the town of Mpeketoni and surrounding villages in Lamu county.
These attacks, close to the once-popular holiday island of Lamu, led to a collapse in tourism on Kenya's coast after foreign governments warned their nationals against travel to the area.