Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta on Tuesday blamed "local political networks", and not Somalia's Shebab militants, for the killings of dozens in two consecutive nights of attacks in the coastal region.
"This... was not an al-Shebab attack. Evidence indicates that local political networks were involved in the planning and execution of a heinous crime," he said in a televised address to the nation. "This also played into the opportunist network of other criminal gangs."
Earlier, Kenya's top Muslim leaders warned that Islamist attacks and a harsh government response risked dividing the country along ethnic and religious lines that could trigger a repeat of the deadly post-election violence six years ago.
"The continued violence risks tearing the country apart... while little has come from the government to address these concerns," Abdullahi Abdi, chairman of the National Muslim Leaders Forum, told reporters.
At least 15 people were reported to have been killed Tuesday in a new attack near Kenya's coast, a day after Somalia's Al-Qaida-linked Shebab rebels massacred close to 50 people in the same area.
"Some of these attacks are aimed at planting seeds of discord and animosity among Kenyans and (to) divide the country along ethnic and religious lines," said Sheikh Mohammad Khalifa, of the Council of Imams and Preachers.
The situation is "a recipe for sectarian and ethnic violence which might be a repeat of the tragic events of 2007," he added.
Heavy handed police operations on the coast -- with Muslim communities accusing the government or extra-judicial killings of radical clerics -- have enraged many, as have the round-ups in the capital of ethnic Somalis and Somali refugees.
Disputed 2007 elections spiraled into ethnic violence in which some 1,200 people were killed, plunging Kenya into its worst wave of violence since independence in 1963.
Sunday night's assault on Mpeketoni, near the coastal island and popular tourist resort of Lamu, was the worst attack on Kenyan soil since last September's siege of the Westgate shopping mall in the capital Nairobi, in which 67 people were killed.
"Instead of the emerging security concerns, we are being treated to knee-jerk reactions where the focus is on harassing innocent people and collective punishment of communities, while those who are killing and maiming Kenyans continue with their evil trade," the leaders said in a joint statement.
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