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| Houses have been burnt and people killed with machetes in the ethnic violence [AFP] |
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Scores of people have been killed in Kenya's western Rift Valley province as the unrest over the disputed re-election of Mwai Kibaki, the incumbent president, continues.
The latest flashpoint is in the town of Naivasha, 90km northwest of the capital Nairobi, where at least 14 people were burnt to death in their homes, officials said on Sunday.
"We have found 14 bodies burnt in houses," a police commander told the AFP news agency on Sunday.
"It appears the attackers locked them in and set them ablaze."
Nine people were killed earlier in clashes between gangs of youths in Naivasha's slums, an AFP correspondent reported.
Violence flare-up
In nearby Nakuru, the provincial capital, at least 130 people are reported to have died in violence since Thursday night.
Ethnic violence first flared up in Nakuru on Thursday night between gangs armed with machetes, spears and bows and arrows.
Al Jazeera's correspondent Mohammed Adow visited the region on Sunday.
He said: "What we are witnessing right now is an escalation of violence, even more than the last few weeks and ever since the skirmishes began in Kenya.
"The government has been using the police to counter the road youths and gangs that have been carrying out the killings.
"The army was not actually trying to help the police in trying to combat these gangs. The police at the moment seem to be overwhelmed."
Overnight killings
Earlier on Sunday, police said that 17 people had been killed overnight - 11 in Nakuru's Manyani slums and six in the nearby trading post of Timboroa.
"We understand that the police are being totally overwhelmed by gangs of up to 100 people," Yvonne Ndege, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Nairobi, said.
Ndege said that army troops were patrolling Nakuru, where a military base is situated.
She said that the government was cautious about bringing the army further into the conflict for fear of provoking further ethnic violence.
At least 700 people have been killed and 260,000 have been displaced in Kenya since the disputed presidential election on December 27 provoked rioting and ethnic killings.
Raila Odinga, the leader of the opposition Orange Democratic Movement (ODM), who ran against Kibaki in December's election, alleges that the vote was rigged, thus robbing him of the presidency.
Amid the violence, Kofi Annan, the former UN secretary-general, met Odinga on Sunday at a hotel in Nairiobi, on the sixth day of his tour of Kenya.
Salim Lone, Odinga's spokesman, said they were asked to name three negotiators for the talks, which he said he would hopefully start "within a week". Rules of engagement
Lone said they expected Annan to deliver four documents on Sunday night, three outlining terms of reference and rules of engagement and the fourth an agenda for the talks.
All were drawn up with input from both sides as well as from civil groups.
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Annan met Odinga, right, again on Sunday to discuss ways to end the crisis [Reuters] |
Both sides might want changes to the documents, but "at least now they are moving towards something concrete", Lone said.
On Saturday , Annan said he saw "gross and systematic human rights abuses of fellow citizens", after visits to parts of the Rift Valley.
However, his effort to end the turmoil has been undermined by the continuing violence.
Annan arranged a symbolic first meeting between Kibaki and Odinga on Thursday, but an initial signal that the opposing leaders were willing to talk was later undermined when they returned to their hardline positions.
Latent ethnic and land disputes have stoked violence between Kibaki's Kikuyu tribe and members of the Luo and Kalenjin ethnic groups, who supported Odinga in the election.
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Al Jazeera and agencies
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