Kenya’s parliament majority leader Aden Dualle said he was ready to send elders and religious leaders to talk to the group in Somalia.
“We tell our Al-Shabaab brothers whatever you demand in Somalia is yours, but leave us alone in Kenya,” Dualle told BBC Somali.
He made these remarks only one day after Al-Shabaab killed three police officers in the northeastern county of Mandera.
The attack originally targeted the convoy of the Governor of Mandera county.
Dualle had earlier suggested a new security approach in Kenya.
“The Government must have a security strategy to deal with Al Shabaab,” he said.
“I am requesting President Uhuru to ask AMISOM, the African Union Mission in Somalia to have Kenyan forces in Somalia moved closer to the Kenya border,” he added in a political rally in Kajiado near Kenyan capital Nairobi.
He added that this move would secure both Mandera and Wajir counties.
In a quick response, meanwhile, Al-Shabaab welcomed the proposal by the Kenyan lawmaker, but set conditions for dialogue.
“We will respond to Adan Dualle’s negotiation plan if it is made on behalf of the Kenyan government,” an Al-Shabaab media official who introduced himself as Yonis told a local Somali radio station.
Sourc: WB