'If they can burn people in a church, how can I be safe?'

KENYA: Even as Kenya Red Cross staff cleared the last of the bodies from the church's smouldering remains, traces of the massacre…

KENYA:Even as Kenya Red Cross staff cleared the last of the bodies from the church's smouldering remains, traces of the massacre still haunted it.

Pungent smoke rose from the blackened rubble where walls once sat. A brightly-patterned piece of a dress with burnt edges lay in ash, underneath it, fragments of white bone.

This is where about 30 Kikuyus died when a mob torched the church near Eldoret in the Rift Valley on Tuesday, a slaughter evoking memories of ethnic violence usually associated with other countries in Africa, not one of its most stable.

"I saw them burn it," said Joseph Kwasila. "We ran away and they chased us to the main road. They were like lions in a rage, with sticks and machetes."

READ MORE

Thousands of President Mwai Kibaki's Kikuyu tribe fled the region yesterday, running across the wastes of an ethnic battleground few Kenyans can believe is their country.

The death toll from four days of clashes has passed 300, rights groups said, in what the government called an opposition-led "genocide". The opposition says the government is to blame.

At the church in Kiambaa, a primarily Kikuyu village near Eldoret town, misshapen cooking pots and sandals lay next to a pile of charred, mangled bicycles blocking the entrance.

Outside, a hastily-abandoned wicker handbag spilled its contents on the grass - a wallet, a pair of sandals, a scarf.

"I'm leaving this place," said a Kikuyu, Simon Mwangi, as he made his way up the road. "If they can burn people in a church, how can I be safe?"

Thousands have taken shelter in churches and police stations across Eldoret town, the main city in the fertile Rift Valley about 300km (186 miles) north of Nairobi, prompting a humanitarian crisis as food and water run short.

"We've been sleeping outside of the airport. Can you imagine how cold they were?" asked children's home operator Patrick Kariuki, gesturing to 23 youthful charges with him.

"I never thought Kenya could be like this. They're killing us because we voted for Kibaki. Maybe the election was rigged. Why don't they go to court instead of inciting?"

Though people from many of Kenya's 42 tribes have been killed, it is Kibaki's tribe - the nation's biggest, and economically dominant - that has seen organised targeting.

Scores of sharply dressed Kenyans with piles of luggage waited to get flights to Nairobi at Eldoret airport after youths blocked the main exit routes from the town.

Police estimate that roughly 75,000 have fled their homes. Some have crossed into neighbouring states - a reversal for a nation that for decades has accepted the victims of conflicts in Somalia, Sudan and Ethiopia.

In Eldoret, a Reuters reporter came across a roadblock manned by youths who fled when they saw police approaching.

"They are asking, 'who are you?' in Kalenjin language. If you don't understand, you are . . . killed with a panga ," said Jane Chepchirchir, one of scores of people at Eldoret airport trying to flee to Nairobi. Some at the roadblocks have ordered people to produce their national identity cards and have killed those with Kikuyu names, witnesses said.

The Rift Valley is home to the Kalenjin tribe of former president Daniel arap Moi, but many Kikuyus have moved there to farm and intermarried, as in Chepchirchir's case.

"I feel so bad; these are my people killing, but Kikuyus are also my people because of my husband, so I am in the middle. Can't we all just be Kenyans?" Chepchirchir asked. - ( Reuters )