
Abubakar Shariff had told journalists he expected to be assassinated by the police.
Two prominent Muslim rights groups in Kenya have threatened to stage street protests in the port city of Mombasa unless the government met a Saturday deadline to say who had killed a prominent Islamist.
The groups, which threat came on Wednesday, had set the deadline a day after the drive-by shooting of Abubakar Shariff, also known as Makaburi.
The United States and U.N. Security Council had accused Makaburi of supporting the Somali militant group al Shabaab.
Mombasa-based Muslims for Human Rights (Muhuri) and Haki Africa have in the past both accused Kenya’s Anti-Terror Police Unit (ATPU) of carrying out extra-judicial killings of well-known Muslims, a charge the police have always strongly denied.
Makaburi’s close ally and friend, preacher Aboud Rogo, was killed in a drive-by shooting in 2012.
“Whichever way we look at it, the government is culpable for either killing Makaburi or for failing to prevent his killing,” said Hussein Khalid, director of Haki Africa, a rights group.
Interior Minister Ole Lenku denied government involvement in Makaburi’s death and said an investigation had been launched.
“We are certain those criminals will be brought to book and dealt according to law,” Lenku said.
Mombasa was calm but tense on Wednesday. Many businesses shut in the city’s flashpoint area of Majengo. Trucks full of armed police patrolled palm-lined streets and surrounding areas.
Muslims accuse Kenya of using heavy-handed tactics to try to dismantle Islamist networks, stirring anger in the Muslim population along the coast who say they are being harassed.
“These kind of killings are not helping. They are only fanning hatred and resistance. Government should find ways of stopping the reckless killings,” said Sheikh Mohammad Dor, chair of the Council of Imams and Preachers of Kenya.
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