Two die during clashes in Kenya

Kenyan police battled hundreds of opposition protesters today leaving two dead as the opposition defied a ban on rallies against…

Kenyan police battled hundreds of opposition protesters today leaving two dead as the opposition defied a ban on rallies against President Mwai Kibaki's disputed re-election, witnesses said.

From the western opposition stronghold of Kisumu to the coastal city of Mombasa, in the capital

A child passes through a burning roadblock in Nairobi's Kibera slum today. Kenyan police battled hundreds of opposition protesters leaving two dead.
A child passes through a burning roadblock in Nairobi's Kibera slum today. Kenyan police battled hundreds of opposition protesters leaving two dead.

Nairobi and the Rift Valley town of Eldoret, police clashed with gangs of youths, some of whom erected roadblocks and burnt tyres.

Police in Kisumu shot in the air and used teargas and batons to disperse a 1,000-strong crowd. Two men were shot dead, witnesses said. A Reuters cameraman saw a corpse in the street, with bullet wounds in the back and side.

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In Nairobi, police chased a series of protesters through the central business district, firing teargas and live rounds in the air.

Three youths were shot in the back of the leg as they tried to run from officers in the sprawling Nairobi slum of Kibera, one of Africa's biggest, a hospital administrator said.

"It was so crowded, a very narrow place. I was trying to escape and I got a bullet in my leg," one of the three, 18-year-old student Oscar Junior, said from his hospital bed.

Many Kenyans and expatriates in the capital stayed at home, shopkeepers boarded windows and traffic was light.

More than 600 people have died and 250,000 have been left homeless in the turmoil since Kibaki was sworn in after a December 27th vote that the leader of the opposition Orange Democratic Movement (ODM), Raila Odinga, says was rigged.

Police outlawed three days of rallies called by the ODM. Rights groups and Western governments, including the United States, have called on Kenya to lift the ban.

Gangs threw up roadblocks near Eldoret, in the Rift Valley area worst hit by the violence, while in Mombasa, police dispersed some 150 youths, scattering them briefly before they attempted to regroup, witnesses said.