Suspected Al-Shabab attackers kill 3 in Kenya’s Lamu — official

Somali Militia of Al-Shabab seen during exercises at their military training camp outside Mogadishu Tuesday Nov. 4, 2008. (AP)
Updated 18 August 2017
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Suspected Al-Shabab attackers kill 3 in Kenya’s Lamu — official

MOMBASA, Kenya: Suspected members of Somalia’s Al-Shabab Islamist group beheaded at least three men overnight in an attack on a Kenyan village, authorities said on Friday, a month after nine were killed in a similar way nearby.
“They were slaughtered. Their heads were cut off from the rest of their bodies,” said a police source, asking not to be named.
Police said four bodies had been found at Maleli village in Kenya’s coastal county of Lamu. Area county commissioner Gilbert Kitiyo said he was aware of three deaths.
“A group of armed suspects raided and killed three locals. All the three were men,” Kitiyo told Reuters by phone, adding the suspects set houses ablaze before disappearing into a nearby forest.
“We cannot speculate, but from previous attacks, the nature and style of this attack can only be associated with these Al-Shabab criminals.”
In July suspected Al-Shabab attackers fighters beheaded nine men in villages near Maleli, and killed three police officers in another attack in the area.
The Al-Qaeda-linked group aims to overthrow Somalia’s UN-backed government and impose its own strict interpretation of Islam. They have intensified attacks in Kenya since it sent troops into Somalia in 2011.
They have also claimed responsibility for a series of cross-border attacks in recent months, including a spate of roadside bombings targeting security forces.


Trump threatens military operation against Colombia, after Venezuela raid

Updated 05 January 2026
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Trump threatens military operation against Colombia, after Venezuela raid

  • Trump told reporters ‍aboard Air Force ‍One, in an ‍apparent reference to Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro

ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE: US President Donald Trump on Sunday threatened military action against Colombia’s government, telling reporters that such an operation “sounds good to ‌me.”
“Colombia is ‌very sick, ‌too, ⁠run ​by ‌a sick man, who likes making cocaine and selling it to the United States, and he’s not going to be ⁠doing it very long,” ‌Trump told reporters ‍aboard Air Force ‍One, in an ‍apparent reference to Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro.
Asked directly whether the US would pursue ​a military operation against the country, Trump answered, “It sounds ⁠good to me.”
The comments came after the United States captured Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in an audacious raid and whisked him to New York to face drug-trafficking charges.