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Kenya riots rage a day after killing of radical cleric linked to Al-Qaeda

Rioters clashed with police in Kenya's port city of Mombasa for a second day Tuesday, after the killing of a radical cleric linked to Al-Qaeda allied militants, witnesses said.

Hundreds of angry youth throwing stones, damaging cars and chanting slogans moved towards the center of Mombasa, a popular tourist city, an AFP reporter witnessed.

"The riots have started again," said Khalid Hussein of Muslims for Human Rights, a local organization.

Preacher Aboud Rogo Mohammed, shot dead on Monday by "unknown people" according to the police, was on US and UN sanctions lists for allegedly supporting Somalia's extremist Al-Shabab insurgents.

Shortly after his death furious protests erupted, with one person on Monday hacked to death, cars set on fire and several churches looted.

The cleric — popularly known as Rogo — was the spiritual leader of the Muslim Youth Center, a group viewed as a close ally of the extremist Al-Shabab.

The Islamist group blamed the authorities for the murder of the preacher, but police have dismissed the claim and say they are hunting the killers.

"Our beloved Sheikh Aboud Rogo was murdered by the unbelievers as part of Kenya's policy of extra-judicial killings against prominent Muslim activists," the group said in a statement Tuesday, calling the killing an “act of barbarity” and warning that they would “hold the Kenyan authorities responsible for this targeted assassination.”

Rogo was placed on a US sanctions list in July for "engaging in acts that directly or indirectly threaten the peace, security or stability of Somalia," specifically for recruiting and fundraising for the hardline Al-Shabab.

The United Nations Security Council placed a travel ban and asset freeze on the cleric in July, saying he had provided "financial, material, logistical or technical support to Al-Shabab.”

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