Report

IDS Evidence Report 130

Tangled Ties: Al-Shabaab and Political Volatility in Kenya

Published on 1 April 2015

In recent years, a spate of attacks has destabilised a swathe of Kenya’s peripheral counties as well as bringing terror to its capital, Nairobi. As violent insecurity spreads, it has fomented fear and stoked ethnic and regional divisions, precipitating security crackdowns and roiling the country’s infamously tumultuous politics.

These developments belie sweeping constitutional reforms that have taken place to address and prevent violence in Kenya. Since Kenya stepped up its military involvement in Somalia in 2011, ostensibly to buffer the country from violence wrought by Al-Shabaab – the Somalia-based jihadi organisation – attacks have multiplied, ranging from the September 2013 siege of Nairobi’s Westgate shopping centre, to village massacres, to the targeted killings of police and religious figures. Yet Kenya’s government, while widening its military engagement in Somalia, was at first slow to recognise and respond to the hand of Al-Shabaab in the country’s widening violent insecurity since the start of its Somalia military operations.

This study adds to existing analyses of Kenya’s shifting political and security dynamics by examining the role of external influences on its system of violence.

Cite this publication

Lind, J.; Mutahi, P. and Oosterom, M. (2015) Tangled Ties: Al-Shabaab and Political Volatility in Kenya, IDS Evidence Report 130, Brighton: IDS

Authors

Jeremy Lind

Professorial Fellow

Marjoke Oosterom

Power and Popular Politics Cluster Lead

Publication details

published by
IDS
authors
Lind, J., Mutahi, P. and Oosterom, M.
journal
IDS Evidence Report, issue 130
language
English

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Addressing and mitigating violence

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