By Standard Team Kenya:
The extradition of three
Western terror suspects to Belgium last week highlights Kenya’s never ending
vulnerability to the terrorist threat posed by Somalia.
It also highlights the
importance of Lamu, Malindi and unpoliced parts of the Coast region in
understanding al-Qaeda and al-Shabaab, and the role foreigners play in the war
on terror in Kenya. Just this month, a car bomb was discovered parked at the
Mombasa County police headquarters.
Last Sunday gunmen
stormed a church in the town and killed six worshippers. Both events bear the
hallmarks of global terrorism with the car bomb, in particular, displaying
initial evidence of the emergence of the Yemeni-based al-Qaeda in the Arabian
Peninsula terror group in coastal Kenya. Meanwhile, the matter of the
extradited Western suspects also illustrates institutional weaknesses and even
incompetence in investigating and prosecuting terror suspects successfully.
Owing technological challenges, inadequate laws, lack of language experts and
corruption, many terrorists either get away on minor charges or are simply
allowed to slip away.
See also: My tearful account of baby Osinya’s airlift For
instance, in 2012, judicial authorities in Mombasa terminated terrorist charges
against Hassan Kafi, a most wanted terror suspect, saying there was no evidence
to sustain the charges. Then mid last year, the prosecution failed to bring up
terror charges against Kafi’s three Belgian accomplices — Mustapha Bouyabaren,
Ben Abdalla Ismail and Rachid Benomari — who were last week extradited to
Belgium to answer 32 terror-related charges.
The three were arrested
in Malindi on July 4 last year, after they crossed the Kenya-Somalia border and
travelled to Lamu on July 2, 2012.
Police reported that six
years ago, the three had rented a flat close to where slain al-Qaeda fugitive
Abdullah Fazul Mohammed lived. Kafi was arrested in Lamu on May 1, 2012 and
deported to Belgium later that year to answer the 32 charges. Reports show that the four entered Kenya on
tourist visas in April 2011 through the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport.
They were believed to
have formed an al-Qaeda cell in Malindi and were linked to a separate group of
jihadists arrested in Turkey as they tried to fly to Somalia from Istanbul.
The four –Kafi,
Mustapha, Ismail and Rachid – are listed in an Interpol report dated July 5,
2012 as part of a terrorist cell of North African Europeans that set off from
Belgium in April 2011 through Bulgaria,
Turkey and other nations
to join al-Qaeda and eventually al-Shabaab in Somalia.
According to the report, the four embarked on
a jihadist mission that took them to the Middle East before they entered Kenya
through Tanzania and Egypt. According to an affidavit filed in court by Chief
Inspector Kinoti Kithinji of the Anti-terrorism Police Unit in Malindi, Rachid,
Mustapha and Ismail were charged for illegal entry into Kenya.
Phone interception
Mustapha, Ismail and Rachid first entered Kenya through JKIA on April 20, 2011
shortly after which their travel documents expired. It is not clear how much
Kenyan authorities knew when the three arrived.
The Interpol report implicating
Kafi, Bouyabaren, Ismail and Rachid in global terrorism is based on a
court-sanctioned phone interception of Rachid’s wife Berrow Loubna’s communication.
These telephone calls established that the suspects had joined al-Qaeda and
al-Shabaab, fought in Somalia, posted messages on jihadist websites on the
groups’ behalf and also raised money for them, including from Kenyan territory.
See also: My tearful account of baby Osinya’s airlift Whereas Kafi was arrested
in Lamu on May 1, 2012 Mustapha, Rachid and Ismail appear to have escaped the
dragnet of the anti-terror police until early July last year. It is not clear
where Mustapha, Ismail and Rachid were hiding in Kenya, although some accounts
state they were in Somalia.
Unable to charge Kafi on terrorism-related
offences, even after claiming he and a Tunisian Derbali Mohamed had been
arrested after entering Lamu from Somalia, police only charged them with
illegal entry into Kenya and each sentenced to six months in jail.
When
prosecution sought direction from the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) on
Kafi’s stay in Kenya, the DPP’s representative accused police of squandering an
opportunity to get actionable information to press more serious charges from
the Belgian embassy. “It may be that the convicts (Kafi and Derbali) were up to
some mischief, but that is mere speculation.
There is no iota of evidence as to
what criminal activity they were trying to engage in,” said Jacob Ondari, the
Assistant Deputy DPP, in a letter to Coast PCIO Ambrose Munyasia on June 12,
2012.
Ondari argued that the only actionable evidence available linked Kafi and
Derbali to illegal entry into Kenya and accused the police of not seeking
foreign help to sustain other charges. “Your officers lost the opportunity when
they failed to get in touch with their embassies,” said Ondari. Ondari did not
explain why the DPP’s office could not seek this foreign help itself, instead
of blaming police.
“In the circumstances, I advise that nothing much can be
done to the convicts,” Ondari said, adding attempts by police to charge the
suspects with engaging in organised crime had “no legs on which it can stand.”
The Standard on Sunday has not established what happened to Derbali or if he
was deported to Tunisia.
The Interpol report
dated July 5, 2013 shows that Mustapha, who is Belgian, asserted that he was a
member of al-Qaeda, according to information received through telephone
intercepts.
An arrest warrant for
terrorism charges for which he faces 10 years in jail in Belgium was issued on
October 3, 2012. The Interpol say Mustapha, at different times, lived in
Belgium, Somalia and Kenya between April 14 and October 3, last year, and that
he left Belgium “in order to join the jihad in Somalia” with Kafi, Rachid and
an unidentified Algerian believed to be Ismail. The group entered Somalia after
flying into Kenya through Egypt.
One phone intercept
shows that Rachid, who is also Belgian, had acknowledged his membership of al-
Qaeda in a conversation with his wife, who was living in Belgium, and also sent
pictures depicting him “equipped with weapons of war.”
In Belgium, a warrant
for his arrest was issued the same day as Mustapha’s by Magistrate Isabelle
Panou over his connection to al-Qaeda and al-Shabaab. Court-sanctioned wiretaps
of Rachid’s phone revealed that his wife Berrou Loubna knew of her husband’s
terrorist activities, including reasons for his departure to Somalia.
Black market
The phone traffic
confirmed that Rachid and Mustapha were in Somalia, with Rachid declaring that
they expected to die in jihad. Rachid is reported as saying he was in charge of
a squad of 10 mujahideen and celebrating the February 2012 merger of al-Shabaab
and al-Qaeda.
See also: My tearful
account of baby Osinya’s airlift According to Interpol, Berrou received
instructions from her husband to pass information around jihadist circles,
websites and to raise funds. All this happened partially and sometimes wholly
on Kenyan soil. According to intelligence sources, Rachid, Mustapha and
Bouyabaren entered Kenya from Somalia through Lamu in May 2012 and travelled in
a private car to Malindi, where they were received by an Arab-speaking contact.
They went straight to a
local black market money exchange with wads of US dollars, which they
reportedly still had when police captured them. Experts in Malindi and Mombasa
believe the three suspects pleaded guilty as a tactic to delay extradition to
Belgium or possibly plot to escape from poorly guarded Kenyan jails.
Source:standardmedia.co.ke
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