Off the wire
Italy's anti-terrorism police targets Al Qaeda-linked cell, 2 alleged Bin Laden aids among arrested  • Around 780,000 Amercians involved in same-sex marriages: Gallup  • HSBC considers moving headquarters out of UK  • Xinhua world news summary at 1530 GMT, April 24  • At least 115 children reported dead in Yemeni conflict: UNICEF  • China smashes Cuba 82-41 in women's basketball challenge  • Roundup: Xi's trip to Pakistan, Indonesia embodies concepts of community of common destiny, new type int'l ties: FM (2)  • 1st LD-Writethru: Premier Li urges high level opening up, innovation  • Roundup: Xi's trip to Pakistan, Indonesia embodies concepts of community of common destiny, new type int'l ties: FM (1)  • Japanese astronaut to arrive in ISS in May  
You are here:   Home

Somalia militants abduct 2 Kenyan teachers

Xinhua, April 24, 2015 Adjust font size:

Suspected Somali Al- Shabaab militants kidnapped two Kenyan teachers on Friday evening in the Mandera border town.

Mandera County Commissioner Alex Nkoyo confirmed the incident, saying the names of the two primary school teachers could not be immediately established were abducted.

"We are investigating the incident which took place at around 4 p.m.. The two teachers are non locals," Nkoyo said without giving more details.

The militias are said to have bundled the two who were in their houses in Mandera town before speeding off to Somalia.

The incident comes hours after Al-Shabaab killed an abducted Kenyan official after failing to receive 43,800 U.S. dollars ransom. The body identified as Mkutar Otieno was found in Badhere area with bullet wounds after he was kidnapped early on Thursday. The vehicle the gang had also carjacked was missing.

The militants late last year hijacked a Nairobi-bound commuter bus and brutally murdered 28 people, mostly non local teachers who were returning home for holiday.

Already, the education sector is the most hit in the northeast region as non Muslim teachers posted to Wajir, Garissa and Mandera counties have declined to resume duty and instead, pitched camp in Nairobi seeking transfers to other regions, citing insecurity among a host of other challenges.

Thousands of students have been forced to conduct their own tuition for lack of teachers while some schools are engaging the services of former students to fill the gap left by the missing teachers. Endi