The movement, outlawed until a 2012 court ruling lifted a ban,
accuses the government of marginalising groups that live there.
Two men accused of being members of a Kenyan
secessionist group were sentenced to death on Friday for murdering four
police officers on the eve of national elections in 2013.
Prosecutors said Jabiri Ali Dzuya and Bwana Mkuu Alwan
were members of the Mombasa Republican Council (MRC), a movement which
campaigns for the independence of Kenya's coastal regions.
Both
had denied the charge, but the judge at Mombasa's high court, Martin
Muya, said there was enough evidence to show they had "brutally murdered four officers on duty".
The
MRC had called for people to boycott the 2013 elections, demanding a
separate government for the Indian Ocean coastal strip which includes
lucrative tourist beaches.
The movement, outlawed until a 2012 court ruling lifted a ban, accuses the government of marginalising groups that live there.
It
has denied police accusations that it was behind a string of sometimes
deadly attacks on police stations and people from outside the area
before the vote.
The lawyer for the two convicted
men said he would appeal against the death sentence. The prosecution
said they it would appeal against the acquittal of two other defendants.
Kenya has not executed anyone since 1987 - condemned prisoners usually end up serving life in jail.
Uhuru Kenyatta,
from one of Kenya's richest families and son of its founding president,
was declared winner of the 2013 presidential election, which the
opposition said was rigged.
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