NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — One person
died and 15 people were wounded when a grenade was thrown into a church in
Kenya's capital during Sunday service, an official said, an attack some
parishioners blamed on a land dispute in the East African metropolis.
Nairobi's deputy police chief, Moses
Ombati, said the grenade exploded at God's House of Miracles International
Church in Nairobi.
Doctors at Nairobi's Kenyatta
Hospital said they had treated 11 patients wounded in the attack. None of the
injuries were life-threatening, said a doctor who refused to give his name
because he was not authorized to speak to reporters.
Steven Mulinge, a church pianist who
was among the wounded, recalled seeing a man walking through the entrance and
hurling what looked like a stone at the altar.
"I heard a blast and then
around me everyone was covered in blood," he said. "Later I found
myself lying down with a deep cut on my hip."
He said about 50 people were
attending the service when the attack happened.
Some church members said they
suspected the attack was related to an unresolved land dispute.
James Maina, who described himself
as a church elder, said his church may have been targeted by neighbors who
claim to own the land on which it is built. He said the church had suffered
minor attacks in the past, including having its windows smashed.
"This thing is between the
mechanics and the church," he said, referring to the motor repairmen who
he said want them gone. "The mechanics don't want us to utilize this land.
They are against us."
The incident is the latest in a
string of grenade attacks since Kenya sent troops into Somalia in October last
year.
In March, grenade explosions at one
of the main bus stations in Kenya's capital killed nine people and wounded 40
others, the deadliest in the series of attacks.
Al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab militants
from neighboring Somalia have vowed to carry out a major attack on Kenya for
sending troops in.
Sunday's attack follows a U.S.
Embassy warning that a terror attack on prominent government buildings and
hotels in Nairobi could be imminent.
The embassy said Monday that the
timing of the attack is not known but they believe it to be at a final planning
stage.
Police have said that the Somali
militant group is suspected of killing at least 30 Kenyan civilians since
Kenyan troops entered Somalia.
In February, police spokesman Eric
Kiraithe said the killings — which go back to October — are believed to have
been carried out by sympathizers of al-Shabab in Kenya.
He said most of the attacks were
carried out in towns near the border between Somalia and Kenya.
Police say that dozens of Kenyan
youth have been recruited by al-Shabab and are operating in the country.
Al-Qaida announced in February that it was merging with al-Shabab.
Ndegwa Muhoro, Kenya's director of
criminal investigations, told reporters outside the church it was "too
early to say" who might be responsible.
"We need to maintain vigilance
because we don't know who they are," he said.
By RODNEY MUHUMUZA, Associated Press
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