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United Nations determined to help Africa fight 'terrorism'
29 Jun 2014 at 00:15hrs | Views
Nairobi - The United Nations is determined to help Kenya and other countries in Africa fight "terrorism" following a series of deadly attacks, Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said on Saturday.
Speaking in the capital Nairobi, he said he had talked with Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta "at length" about how the UN and Kenyan government can work together in countering "heinous" attacks.
"(The) UN is determined to work together with the Kenyan government in helping enhancing the capacities of the Kenyan government and many African countries who are suffering from this international terrorism," he said, although he did not give further details of what form any assistance might take.
He also told reporters that their talks had also covered major political and security issues concerning counter-terrorism in the region.
Kenya has been the scene of a series of attacks attributed to the Somali al-Qaeda-linked group Shabaab and their supporters since Kenya sent troops over the border to help fight the group in 2011.
The Shabaab claimed responsibility for the assault on the Westgate shopping centre that killed at least 67 people in the Kenyan capital in September last year as well as for two night-time attacks on the Kenyan coast in the middle of June that claimed around 60 lives.
Shabaab rebels said they carried out the attacks in retaliation for Kenya's military presence in Somalia and the Kenyan government's "brutal oppression" of Muslims, although the Kenyan President blamed "local political networks" for the killings.
During their interview, the president and secretary-general also discussed Somalia, the crisis-hit South Sudan, and the Great Lakes region, where tensions remain high between the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda.
Ban arrived in the Kenyan capital at the close of a UN Environment summit.
As part of the trip he also visited the Nairobi National Park where the UN is working to fight the traffic in fauna and flora, where he adopted a six-month old lion cub.
Speaking in the capital Nairobi, he said he had talked with Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta "at length" about how the UN and Kenyan government can work together in countering "heinous" attacks.
"(The) UN is determined to work together with the Kenyan government in helping enhancing the capacities of the Kenyan government and many African countries who are suffering from this international terrorism," he said, although he did not give further details of what form any assistance might take.
He also told reporters that their talks had also covered major political and security issues concerning counter-terrorism in the region.
Kenya has been the scene of a series of attacks attributed to the Somali al-Qaeda-linked group Shabaab and their supporters since Kenya sent troops over the border to help fight the group in 2011.
Shabaab rebels said they carried out the attacks in retaliation for Kenya's military presence in Somalia and the Kenyan government's "brutal oppression" of Muslims, although the Kenyan President blamed "local political networks" for the killings.
During their interview, the president and secretary-general also discussed Somalia, the crisis-hit South Sudan, and the Great Lakes region, where tensions remain high between the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda.
Ban arrived in the Kenyan capital at the close of a UN Environment summit.
As part of the trip he also visited the Nairobi National Park where the UN is working to fight the traffic in fauna and flora, where he adopted a six-month old lion cub.
Source - AFP