Category Archives: Crime

KENYA: THE GOVERNMENT IS URGED TO BEEF UP SECURITY POLICE PATROL ALONG THE NANDI-LUO BORDER

Reports Leo Odera Omolo

SECURITY along the Nandi-Luo border should be improved in order to save the lives of people now being killed every night. The situation now calls for urgent action by the higher authorities on both sides of the border to restore peace and calm.

Borders within Muhoroni sub-county is getting worse day by day. The residents have now appealed to the government to beef up police security night patrol. At the same time, politicians, especially MPS who are representing area close to the border area have been asked to hold public meeting and educate their constituents on the importance of living in peace and harmony, and to find the way o f resolving the land disputes amicably.

The people, who are believed to be member of terror gang from Nairobi, last Saturday night raided the small Police post at Ruga near Chemelil and attacked the policemen with arrows, machete and other crude weapons. The gang injured one policeman forcing his colleague to retaliate resulting in the three member of the gang being shot dead. The rest fled and disappeared under the dark cover.

The raid on the police post was staged at about 1.30 AM.

This attack came only a few hours after the revelers in a pub, which is located at Kibigori were forced to take cover following arrow attack by unknown people. Kibigori is an old, but a small town situated along the Kisumu-Nakuru railway line, but on the Kisumu Countryside.

The revelers were mainly a group of school teachers who were returning home after attending the colorful burial of their slain colleague Mr. Abira, the retired former head teacher of Nyakoko School and a Kisumu based businessman. He was shot with an arrow and killed by the Nandi youths two weeks ago. The incident took place when the retired teacher had gone to Chepsweta area to inspect his sugar cane. The deceased was given a warm send off in at the burial which attracted hundreds of friends, well-wishers and relatives at his Kajulu home. His killers have yet to be arrested.

As the teachers were enjoying their refreshment in a small bar, unknown people fired poisoned arrow into the pub. As they run helter-skelter, the bar owner went out to check in the darkness as to what was happening outside. He was shot with the arrow and another man followed suit.

No arrest has been made so far no arrest has been made.

The Kisumu Regional Commissioner Ms Lorna Odero is the only senior government official who has visited the area and preached peace to the two communities. of the border.

On the Nyanza side of the border only Muhoroni MP James OyangoK”oyoo has toured the troubled areas. He told the two warring communities to live in peace. But his Nandi Hill counterpart has yet to be seen in the area. K”Oyoo told the two communities to love one another and live-in peace and harmony.

Sources in both Muhoroni and Chemilil have confided to this writer that the latest flare up which has brought about the insecurity situation along the border between the two communities is abut some old and outstanding land disputes. One community is claiming that farms, owned by large scale farmers and those under the Settlement Schemes, were originally their ancestral land.

Settlement schemes in areas like Muhoroni, Songhor, Koru, Fort-Tennan,Kimwani were opened shortly after independent in 1965.These were the areas previously known as the White Highland, which were large scale mixed farms and belonged to the departed white settlers.

Ends

EAST AFRICA LAWYERS CALLS FOR THOROUGH ENFORCEMENT OF LAW AGAINST ABUSE OF CHILDREN

To: jaluo jaluo@jaluo.com

By Agwanda Saye

Regional lawyers have called for stringent enforcement of laws towards containing increasing criminal sexual offences against children in East Africa (EA).

The lawyers decried escalating cases of defilement and under age prostitution leading to a growing number of girls below 14 years old in public maternity wards in the region.

LSK Chairman Mr. Eric Mutua said that lack of prosecution of perpetrators and out of court resolution of criminal sexual offences against children aggravates the situation.

“We must strictly implement or draft stringent laws that would protect children from increasing cases of defilement and childhood pregnancies among others,” Mutua said.

The lawyers, magistrates and probation officers are attending a three day conference on Supporting Access to Justice for Children and Youth in East Africa at Enashipai Lodge, Naivasha.

The conference heard that children are increasingly dropping out of school to be used in cross border trade between Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania.

Other children have been infected with HIV/Aids following increased cases of childhood prostitution following involvement in fishing trade and mining in Uganda.

Tanganyika Law Society President Mr. Francis Stolla said that courts in East Africa are not strictly implementing existing sexual offences laws to protect children.

“Tanzanian law provides for up to 30 years in prison for criminals found guilty of defilement…Kenya has similar penalties,” Mr. Stolla said.

Ugandan Advocate Mr. Aaron Bessigye said that defilement cases in the country would attract imprisonment for life or death penalty.

“Ugandan law is strict on aggravated rape whereby the offenders infect their victims with HIV/Aids,” Mr. Bessigye said.

The lawyers said that reported cases of FGM are aggravated over lack of successful prosecution of perpetrators despite legal provisions on the same.

“Tanzanian law provides 15 years imprisonment for FGM perpetrators but the culprits are rarely arraigned in court,” Mr. Stolla said.

Mr. Bessigye said that Ugandan law provides 18 years imprisonment for FGM perpetrators but none is yet to be charged despite increased reported cases on the vice.

Magistrates and Probation Officers attending the conference heard that several village leaders were bribed not to report cases of child sexual offences and FGM.

“Sexual offences against children must never be settled out of court towards bringing the criminals to book,” Mutua said.

Ends

KENYA: WESTGATE LOOTING HAS NOW GONE TRIBAL

from: Ouko joachim omolo
The News Dispatch with Omolo Beste
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 201E

It is very unfortunate that the Westgate Mall looting has gone tribal. Gen Julius Karangi says Victor Otieno and Victor Ashiundu had to be sacked and jailed for looting during the Westgate shopping mall terror attack. The third soldier, Isaiah Wanjala is under probe over the allegations.

According to Gen Karangi the soldiers were found with mobile phones, cameras and chargers that were “stolen” from the mall during the siege. It contradicts his previous statement that soldiers had only taken water during the four-day siege.

The Jubilee Government, through the Interior and Coordination of National Government Cabinet Secretary, Joseph Ole Lenku, on the other hand has rubbished the Jicho Pevu exposé by KTN’s investigative Journalists, Mohammed Ali, and, John Allan Namu, which exposed how the Kenya Defence Forces (KDF) looted the Westgate Mall.

Speaking on Saturday, Lenku maintained that KDF never looted the Westgate Mall, saying they are very professional and highly trained soldiers who cannot engage in any act of lawlessness during an operation.

This comes even after the CCTV footage showed KDF soldiers “illegally doing shopping” (looting) and leaving the mall with their loot in white Nakumatt paper bags. The question now is, why only three soldiers, all from Western Kenya have been identified?

Speaking earlier on, Asman Kamama of Security and Ndung’u Githinji of Defence noted that KDF never looted at Westgate contrary to earlier allegations by shop owners. Instead, Jubilee MPs alleged that the shop owners at Westgate Mall took advantage of the terror situation to loot their own shops to fleece insurance companies.

Members of Parliament in the joint Committee on National Security and Defence have also changed their mind saying the Kenya Defence Forces (KDF) may have looted at the Westgate Mall during the terror attack last month.

Previously Parliamentary Committees, which jointly investigated the Westgate Mall looting absolved KDF from looting allegations and cleared them of any wrong doing at the Mall.

But later on Defence Committee Chairman, Ndungu Githinji, confirmed that KDF may have looted the Westgate Mall contrary to their earlier statement that had cleared them, noting that during their investigation they were never given or viewed all the CCTV footage at Westgate and that the new footage is very compelling and clearly shows KDF looting.

The big question however, since Karangi is giving it tribal oulook, will the MPs get the truth when they go back again to the table to ascertain the truth about KDF soldiers and their operation at Westgate as they have promised?

Up to now Karangi is unable to satisfactorily explain why his men not only assisted but took over operations within the mall despite President Uhuru Kenyatta putting the Inspector General of Police David Kimaiyo in charge.

Apart from the three suspects, Karangi has also failed to satisfactorily convince Kenyans that when CCTV footage displayed soldiers walking out of Nakumatt with paper bags and then stopping by a mobile phone counter, was that water?

And even if the soldiers took water, why carry them out when they were supposed to drink them inside? And by the way soldiers are supposed to carry all the necessary items require when they go for any operation, why were they in the first place carry water from Nakumatt?

Again outside the mall there were charitable people who were providing food and water to the security and journalists, why could they not carry water with them inside instead of taking water of the supper market without permission?

Karangi has also failed to explain clearly what caused the second floor parking lot to collapse. Instead Karangi maintained that the building was brought down by mattresses the terrorists burnt and not the anti-tank gun they used to expose the terrorists.

Fr Joachim Omolo Ouko, AJ
Tel +254 7350 14559/+254 722 623 578
E-mail omolo.ouko@gmail.comFacebook-omolo beste
Twitter-@8000accomole

Real change must come from ordinary people who refuse to be taken hostage by the weapons of politicians in the face of inequality, racism and oppression, but march together towards a clear and unambiguous goal.
-Anne Montgomery, RSCJ
UN Disarmament
Conference, 2002

Kenya: Goat Thief buried Alive in Kilifi

From: Maurice Oduor

This is overkill. Burying someone alive for stealing 3 goats !!!! God have mercy !!! On the other hand, he did take those goats via robbery. Robbing people tends to get them very angry.

http://www.kenyan-post.com/2013/10/this-goat-thief-faced-consequences.html

This goat THIEF faced the consequences…… BURIED ALIVE in Kilifi

The Kenyan DAILY POST County News 14:49

Friday 25th October 2013 – A 40 year old man from a village in Kilifi County was buried alive for allegedly stealing three goats.

Angry villagers of Girimacha area in Langobaya stormed the house of Kesi Muhamba and forcefully threw him out. Muhamba was accused of raiding a homestead alongside two other men and stealing three goats before tying them on a motorbike and escaping.

The owner raised an alarm and the two were cornered by neighbours before going far.

The two escaped leaving Muhamba, who was carrying the goats at the mercy of the mob. He was stoned and after getting unconscious, buried in a shallow grave.

The area police boss who confirmed the incident said that the suspect died from suffocation. He condemned mob justice urging locals to shun violence. The body was retrieved by police and is lying at the Kilifi District hospital mortuary.

The Kenyan DAILY POST

KENYA: THE GOVERNMENT IS URGED TO ENHANCE THE SECURITY SITUATION ALONG THE NANDI-LUO BORDER

From: LEO ODERA

The recent reports emerging from Muhoroni Sub-County within Kisumu COUNTY are pointing out the alarmingly deteriorating security along the Nyanza-Rift Valley border. Several people have lost their lives within the last two months as the result o senseless and attacks by criminal elements.

Nyanza regional commissioner Franciis Mutie toured Cgehelil Location last weekend and addressed series of public Barazas and urged the two communities, namely the Luos and Nandis to maintain peace and also warned squatters to desist from the bad habit of invading other people’s lands, occupying them. Mutie did not mince his words and told the squatters that the government will kick them out of the land they were currently occupying illegally.

The first incident was the killing of a night guard at the palatial home of MR Arjit SINGH Singyh [Simba} and his family. They had travelled to Makinndu for religious pilgrimage when the attack took place, forcing the family to rush back home. The night guard was shot at close range with a powerful rifle and died instantly. The unknown assailants later ransacked Mr Singh house turning everything upside down.

So far no arrest has been made by police in connection with the killing of the night guard. Local observers believes that the killing was the result of business rivalry, which is suspected to be connected with the scramble for the Miwani Sugar Mills and its 900 nucleus estate farm. He company was run-down and went burst about 15 years ago.

Muhoroni MP James O nyango K’Oyoo has appealed to the Luos AND Nandis communities to live in harmony.

The MP also termed the action of one community invading the farms which belonging to their neighbors as an act of high provocation, saying that respecting one another property was the best component of maintaining peace and tranquility along the tribal common borders.

The MP’S complaint came in the wake of the killing two weeks ago of a prominent LUO businessman and a farmer who was shot with an arrow at Chepsweta area of Chemelili Location. The deceased, who was accompanied by his sibling, had gone to inspect his sugar cane farm when they were attacked by the Nandi youths. His brother sustained serious bodily injuries and was treated at the Chemelil sugar company dispensary and discharged. YOUTHS FROM THE luo side of the border had grouped to dtsgr rotation, but were restrained and dispersed by the police.

K’Oyoo has since raised the issue in parliament an urged the Nandi leaders to top inciting the youths.

END

The Global Slavery Index 2013

From: Yona Maro

This is the first edition of the Global Slavery Index. It is the first Index of its kind – providing an estimate, country by country, of the number of people living in modern slavery today.

Each year, Walk Free’s Global Slavery Index will produce the most detailed global picture of the numbers of enslaved people available. The Index will also identify factors that shed light on the risk of modern slavery in each country and examine the strength of government responses in tackling this issue.

Explore findings from the 2013 Report by navigating the interactive map. Browse regional and country-level research and statistics examining the risks of modern slavery, current levels of government response and a set of recommendations that can effectively tackle modern slavery.

Link:
http://d3mj66ag90b5fy.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/GlobalSlaveryIndex_2013_Download_WEB1.pdf

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KENYA: REST IN PEACE KASHONI PHIRI, YOUR WIFE ALINANE AND CHILD

From: Charles Banda

The picture shows Kashoni Phiri enjoying his wedding day with his sweetheart Alinane.

This couple were discovered yesterday killed in their house together with their 4 months old child. Police say they were killed some days ago but were only discovered yesterday in a decomposed state.

Kashoni Phiri was a teacher at Umbwi Secondary. Police say the houseboy of the deceased family has disappeared and they suspect that he knows something about the death and at the moment they are looking for him

RIP

Tanzania: Time for journalists to minimize harm

From: Abdalah Hamis

By Simon Mkina

http://blog.simonmkina.com/2013/10/time-for-journalists-to-minimize-harm.html

— Mass media has a well-known role to play in modern society. It can bring about radical changes and improve social circumstances as it influences our social, civil, cultural, political, economic and aesthetic outlook.

It is rightly said that media use is an index of development. The greater the use, the higher will be the level of education. As social beings, humans are sustained by mutual interactions, exchange of ideas, information and views with the fellow beings.

Illiteracy, which is nothing but absence of education and information is a stumbling obstruct for any aspect of development-
social, economic, political, cultural and even spiritual. Media has become the harbinger of development through the removal of these roadblocks and the provision of information and knowledge.

Apart from being the force of changes and knowledge, media is a vehicle of exposing various scams, scandals, frauds, embezzlements and many other cases of corruption leading to initiation of enquiries and other processes of prosecution against the perpetrators of these crimes.

However, media too suffers from some pitfalls; growing consumerism and materialism have adversely impacted our media. The partisan attitude, sectarian outlook and biased individualism in some sections of media are a testimony that media too is susceptible to harmful influences.

Often, in fierce rivalries, ethics of journalism are thrown out of the window to settle old scores. Running after opportunistic gains is another problem our media suffers from. The incidents of throwing are against the ethics of media.

So, in order for avoid chaos that media can bring about in the society, Journalists are supposed to obey their profession ethics when posting their articles or comments in their respective newspapers, television, radios, or on social forums.

Currently in Tanzania, there are some journalists who are going against journalism ethics by posting articles that are bias and that ethically they were not needed to be posted by professionals.

Such social forums have been created so that to enable people to present challenges that facing them whereby journalists have to use them as a tip of striker.

The Executive Secretary of Union of Press Clubs in Tanzania, Mr Aboubakar Karsan said recently that it was not wrong for journalists to comment or to post articles on their media or on social sites, but they have to make sure that they follow ethics of their professional by posting truth and well balanced posts.

He adds that instead journalists have to use those social sites to get tips for investigation stories so that to help people on challenges facing them, they use their platforms to write very cheap stories.

Furthermore, in asking journalists to adhere to their ethics, senior official from Media Council of Tanzania, John Mireny, recently was quoted saying that his council has noted a story in a mainstream paper of wide circulation that openly identified a victim of rape.

The story from the court, filed from Tarime District, in Tanzania gave explicit detailed information about the victim, including her name, age, and her residential details.
Mr Mireny said the article was identified by the MCT’s rapid response print media monitoring team.

Rape, he said, has recently become something of a human interest story-of-choice for the mainstream media in Tanzania. But more coverage has usually not meant better coverage, he added.

This has, once again, forced the MCT to immediately respond and remind reporters and editors of the necessity of adhering to ethical reportage.

In particular, the monitored reporting style, Mireny said, has directly violated the Code of Ethics for Media Professionals in Tanzania. On page 25, sub-section 1.9 regarding reporting victims of sexual offences, journalists are directed to “avoid identifying victims of sexual assaults”.

Mireny said that prejudiced and insensitive reporting is like ‘second rape’, causing the victim to feel violated all over again.

”The press wields a lot of power, owing to its wide reach. But through irresponsible reporting, it condemns to permanent stigmatisation even those who are victims of such inhumane acts, making them suffer double tragedy”, he said.

While it is necessary to expose such inhumane acts, professional ethics hold that it is important to minimise the harm by not identifying rape victims, he added.
Rape is coerced sex, a crime, and only perpetrators can be held responsible for the crimes they commit – not victims. Naming and shaming should be of perpetrators, not victims.

Reporting of a heinous crime like rape and sodomy in mainstream media does not have to be voyeuristic, insensitive, sensational, speculative and thus unethical, he cautioned.

These are some of the practice in journalism that has been painting badly the professional and now must be addressed to stop them so that Tanzania journalism become more responsible and respected.

Kenyan CEOs questioned over unregistered SIM cards

From: Constantino Kudoja

Safaricom CEO Bob Collymore. FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP.

Chief executives of Kenyan mobile services firms Safaricom, Airtel and Telkom Kenya recorded police statements Tuesday morning over unregistered SIM cards linked to crime.

The operators are accused of being in violation of regulations for SIM card registration, as it emerged that police are trying to trace telephone numbers they suspect were used by the terrorists who attacked Nairobi’s Westgate Mall last month. The attack left 67 people dead and hundreds injured.

Safaricom boss Bob Collymore was questioned at CID headquarters as Airtel’s Shivan Bhargava appeared before another CID office in Nairobi to record his statement.

Telkom’s Kenya CEO Michael Ghossein said that he was grilled for two and half hours on Monday night.

“I was picked by the CID at Telkom Kenya headquarters at around 7.30 pm or 8.00 pm. I was leaving the office for my house when I found them downstairs waiting for me. We went to Kilimani CID offices (in Nairobi) where I was questioned about the unregistered SIM cards on our network,” Mr Ghossein said.

On Monday, four mobile phone firms’ bosses and their vendors were warned they risked arrest over criminal offences committed through any unregistered SIM cards on their network.

The Cabinet Secretary in charge of ICT, Mr Fred Matiang’i, said since Sunday, officials from the Communications Commission of Kenya and the police are carrying out a swoop around the country on mobile phone companies and their agents to determine whether they comply with the Communications Act and regulations that were issued last December.

“Despite the regulations, some agents have been selling pre-activated SIM cards or fail to register the cards at the point on sale,” he said during a press briefing in Nairobi.

KENYA: WAS WESTGATE ATTACK TO DESTABILIZE THE COUNTRY FROM ICC TRIALS?

From: Ouko joachim omolo
The News Dispatch with Omolo Beste
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2013

Doreen from Nairobi writes: “Fr Beste from what I read in your last paragraph of your today’s dispatch of why the commission of inquiry of Westgate attack formed by President Uhuru Kenyatta will not avail the report to the public because none of such reports have been made public because they implicate big people, don’t you think this is a waste of taxpayers’ money?”

I also read somewhere online that many have been tempted to draw up their own conclusions over the timing of the attack, considering that President Uhuru Kenyatta, and his Deputy, William Ruto, are facing ICC trials at The Hague.

And that almost three months ago former Prime Minister, Raila Odinga, had in one of his interviews with Citizen TV, categorically hinted that President Uhuru Kenyatta, and, William Ruto, were planning to destabilize the country ahead of their ICC trials to interrupt and delay their cases. What is your take on this?

Doreen has raised very important issue. It has proved beyond doubt that in Kenya the outcome of the inquiries cannot be made public because in most cases they implicate people who form them. They are not independent because they are formed by the head of states that can or not release them.

Concerning what you read online, I did the same. It was reported by the Kenyan Daily Post that former Prime Minister, Raila Odinga had in one of his interviews with Citizen TV, categorically hinted that President Uhuru Kenyatta, and, William Ruto, were planning to destabilize the country ahead of their ICC trials to interrupt and delay their cases.

The Daily post reported that Raila noted that their aim was to make sure that the country becomes so unstable to justify their application to halt their trials or defer them in the name of national security.

Since then, a number of horrible things have happened in the country, whose aim was to throw the national security into jeopardy and destabilize the country. Among them include; the Westgate attack, Wajir killings, Western killings, Mandera killings and to some extent Tana River killings, where no meaningful resolution by the Government has been made.

The same daily Post reported that the National Intelligence Service (NIS) is blaming Raila Odinga, and Homabay Senator, Otieno Kajwang, in connection with Saturday’s mall attack where over 70 people died and hundreds injured.

According to latest reports which were presented to President Uhuru Kenyatta on Friday, Raila Odinga’s “men” were in charge of the “terrorism surveillance department” in the NSIS and it seems they slept on their job which led to loss of innocent civilians on Saturday’s mall attack.

The NSIS sources according to the report say when Raila Odinga was one of the Principals of the coalition Government, he appointed his cronies as senior members of the NSIS and they have been sleeping on their job.

Regarding Kajwang, the NSIS said the former Immigration Minister issued hundreds of permits to terrorists who will later strike Kenya last Saturday.

Credible reports according to the Daily Post indicate that the terrorists were issued permits by Kajwang’s office last year when he was immigration boss. Other reports indicate that the said terrorists used fake Identity Cards supplied by corrupt Government officials as early as last year during Kajwang’s reign as Immigration Minister.

The same Daily Post reported that the Sunday Nation Political columnist, Prof Makau Mutua, demanded that President Uhuru Kenyatta should resign because he was aware of the Westgate terror attack and he was unable to stop it.

According to counter terrorism reports seen by the Kenyan DAILY POST, President Uhuru Kenyatta was briefed by the National Security Advisory Committee (NSAC) in mid September when intelligence reports showed that the Al Shabaab had intensified activities in Kenya and were planning a major attack.

On his twitter account on Saturday, Makau who is a Distinguished Law Professor at Buffalo Law School in New York said President Kenyatta and his Kikuyu cronies are supposed to resign since they were unable to stop last Saturday’s mall attack in Westgate where over 70 people died and hundreds injured.

On the other hand, Raila Odinga wants the government to explain how suspected terrorists who stormed Westgate Mall in Nairobi got into the country. Raila was quoted to have said the government should come out clean over the issue to avoid speculations.

Raila said Kenyans need to know how they had access into the country, who issued them with the permits and how it was done. Raila blamed the Jubilee government for laxity on security matters within the country.

Raila also took issue with the National Intelligence Service for sleeping on the job at the expense of the lives of innocent Kenyans. “Somebody somewhere must be held responsible for this,” he said.

Raila made the remarks while addressing a gathering in Kisumu after paying a courtesy call to former Jaramogi aide Odungi Randa, in his Jua Kali office on his way to Siaya to drum up support for ODM’s candidate for Siaya gubernatorial seat.

On the other hand, the National Intelligence Service claims to have given advance warning of the Westgate attack, according to some security officers.

Gen Michael Gichangi, NIS Director General, is due to meet MPs of the Defense and Foreign Relations committee on condition that he testifies in public, condition Defense committee Chairman Ndungu Gethenji (Tetu) has objected.

May be there is something Gichangi knows about the attack that he would want the public know but Ndungu Gethenji is afraid of. This of course leaves a lot to be desired as speculations to who exactly planned for the attack and why.

Two NIS officers who did not want their identities revealed told the Star that their organisation had given advance warning of the attack to Inspector General of Police Service David Kimaiyo and Criminal Investigations Department director Ndegwa Muhoro. This also leaves a lot to be desired since the security did not act on the report to prevent the attack.

If this is the case then there is no doubt that Kimaiyo and Muhoro should also be investigated to discern why they did not act on the information. It means they were aware of the plan.

It will also require that some senior officers within the Office of the President should be investigated why they suppressed intelligence reports. And if this is true the NIS was not to blame for the Westgate attack. No wonder why the director wants the hearing be made in public so that Kenyans can know nothing but the truth.

The Office of the President should also tell Kenyans what happened when it emerged that a policewoman recorded a statement after her brother who works for the NIS warned her not to visit Westgate on Saturday because of an impending attack.

The pregnant policewoman regularly went window shopping in Westgate on Saturdays.

“She has told police that her brother who is a NIS officer warned her not to visit Westgate that Saturday because she would not be able to run with her bulging tummy,” a senior officer involved in the investigation said.

The Office of the President should also make in public what the policewoman who was picked up from her home on Tuesday night and taken to CID headquarters on Kiambu road where she was interrogated for four hours before being allowed to go home.

For this reason Gichangi should be allowed to testify in the open so that Kenyans come to know the truth about the attack. The NIS had also warned the police about the danger before the Baragoi massacre but the police ignored the intelligence reports.

If this is the case then there is no doubt that Uhuru Kenyatta must have been briefed but ignored to act. This again leaves a lot to be desired. It leaves more questions than answers.

The Daily Telegraph details 29 separate intelligence warnings linked to al-Shabaab activity in Kenya in the last 12 months. Nairobi mall attack: Westgate was named as a target a year ago.

As the row between Kenya’s internal security agencies escalated on Friday, a file of alerts seen by Exactly a year before last weekend’s shopping centre attack, one names three Islamist agents who were in Nairobi and “planning to mount suicide attacks on undisclosed date, targeting Westgate Mall”.

Four months later, on February 1, there were warnings that al-Qaeda and al-Shabaab operatives were plotting attacks in Nairobi and Mombasa.

“The envisaged modus operandi include, but is not exclusive to, Mumbai-attack style, where the operatives storm into a building with guns and grenades and probably hold hostages,” said the documents, from the National Intelligence service and passed to The Daily Telegraph.

The immediate aftermath has been questions: what did the National Intelligence Service know, when did they know it, and what did they do with that information? What did the Kenya Police Service know, when did they know it and what actions did they take? What did the Kenya Defence Forces know, when did they know it, and what did they do with that information? Is there a scenario where the entire incident or part of it, including some of the deaths and injuries, could have been avoided?

Other questions include why the numbers of the dead and injured did not change, even after the building came down. Were there no more hostages or even terrorists in the building at that point? So who brought the building down? Where are the terrorists? Did they escape? Were they captured? Were they killed? Where are their bodies?

Other questions include: was there a joint command amongst our security agents during the attack? Was there an incident that led to fatalities amongst some of our security agents from friendly fire? Is there a protocol of engagement, even as a theoretical paper, on how to deal with a terrorist attack?

Which agency takes the lead? Where does the buck stop? Who looted Westgate shops? What has been done to the looters? How do we assure Kenyans that the next time something like this happens they can trust the armed forces for their protection and that of their property?

Fr Joachim Omolo Ouko, AJ
Tel +254 7350 14559/+254 722 623 578
E-mail omolo.ouko@gmail.com
Facebook-omolo beste
Twitter-@8000accomole

Real change must come from ordinary people who refuse to be taken hostage by the weapons of politicians in the face of inequality, racism and oppression, but march together towards a clear and unambiguous goal.

-Anne Montgomery, RSCJ
UN Disarmament
Conference, 2002

KENYA: QUESTIONS GITARI WANTED ANSWERS BUT DIED BEFORE HE COULD BE ANSWERED

From: Ouko joachim omolo
The News Dispatch with Omolo Beste
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2013

When Archbishop David Gitari gave testimony during the Truth Justice and Reconciliation Commission (TJRC) sitting in Nyeri he wished he could not die before the government of Kenya answered him the following questions:

1. Who killed Nyandarua politician JM Kariuki in 1975 and why? Gitari told the commission he went to the media to protest against President Kenyatta’s government as it was obvious some of Kenyatta’s cronies had a hand in the murder.

2. What happened with commission of inquiry parliament appointed to investigate the circumstances leading to the murder? He told the commission some people were mentioned as having played a role in Kariuki’s murder but nothing was done, “where is justice?” Gitari posed.

3. Why did the government of Daniel Moi kill Robert Ouko in 1990 and why? And like Kenyatta, what happened with the inquiry to Ouko’s death? “There must be people in government who know how Ouko was killed,” said Gitari.

He said the many commissions formed by the government whose findings have never been made public concerned him. “The government forms commissions to hoodwink people,” said the retired archbishop adding that he hoped the TJTC would not be like the other previous commissions.

4. In 1988 when the government of Moi tried to silence everyone and as a result, outspoken MPs, the media and trade unions were muted and only a few church leaders like him, Bishop Henry Okullu and Bishop Kipsang Muge could not be silenced, Gitari wondered, where was other church leaders?

Gitari told TJRC that he witnessed first hand the injustices of the mlolongo system when he visited a few polling stations and could see smaller queues winning and the longer ones losing.

He summed it: “According to Kanu’s mathematics, five was bigger than 5, 000!”

Gitari urged the TJRC to go to the National Archives, retrieve a report commissioned on his house raid and hand him and his family members copies.

Another injustice Gitari raised was committed when 3, 000 Kanu delegates meeting at Kasarani passed 12 resolutions in 12 minutes. Among them that NCCK should be abolished. He says the government used the delegates as a rubber stamp to pass the resolutions.

Other issues Gitari demanded an answer to no avail included:

1. In early 1975 when the first bombs exploded prior to the death of JM Kariuki in February where there were two blasts in central Nairobi, inside the Starlight night club and in a travel bureau near the Hilton hotel, what was the motive?

2. The day after the second explosion, J.M Kariuki revealed in Parliament that his car had been hit ‘by what seemed to be bullets’. There were rumours of a botched attempt on his life. They were followed by a more serious blast in a Nairobi bus on 1 March, which killed 30 people.

Despite a massive public outcry and a police manhunt, no arrests were made. For several days thereafter, the city lived in fear, destablised by numerous telephone bomb hoaxes. Did someone try to create a climate of fear and if so why?

3. On 2 March 1975, the day after the bus blast, security officials including GSU commander Ben Gethi Publicly accosted J. M. Kariuki outside the Hilton hotel, followed by the police throughout the day, including European police reservist Patrick Shaw, what was the motive?

4. Why did Gethi ask Kariuki to accompany the Security officials into a convoy of cars and took him to an unknown destination?

5. The next day, Maasai herdsmen discovered his tortured and mutilated corpse in the Ngong hills near Nairobi. His fingers had been cut off his eyes gouged out before he was shot dead, why did the police send the corpse to the mortuary as an unknown victim.

6. After Kariuki’s disappearance, there was a lull of five days while friends and family tried to discover his whereabouts, there were rumours that he had been detained. Finally, on 7th March, Assistant Minister Justus Ole Tipis admitted to the Assembly that Kariuki was missing and appealed for anyone knowing his whereabouts to cooperate with police.

The same day Kenyatta, returning to Nairobi from a month-long stay in Nakuru, made a veiled speech that appealed for order, and warned ‘the government would have no mercy on any individual or group that attempted to disrupt peace and harmony in Kenya, what did Kenyatta mean? Did he know what was to come out of it?

7, When on Saturday 8 March, the Daily Nation reported Kariuki was in Zambia, although the news desk already had sworn statements that the corpse in the mortuary was his; editor-in-chief George Githii ordered a reluctant news desk to print this misinformation, who instructed Githii to do so and why?

8. On 11 March, nine days after his abduction, Kariuki’s wife identified his body in the mortuary, after which armed GSU sealed off the building. At the same time Moi was making a statement, reporting that Kariuki’s whereabouts were still unknown, could Moi be asked who told him to tell lies and why?

9. On 12 March, police commissioner Bernard Hinga finally confirmed that Kariuki was dead, killed by two bullet wounds. He claimed that the ‘partial decomposition’ of the body made identification impossible, why did it take time to declare JM had died?

10. On 14March, parliament appointed a Select Committee to investigate the killings. Its chair was backbencher Elijah Mwangale from Bungoma, and it included Martin Shikuku, Seroney and other friends of Kariuki, why is result of the committee not made public?

Since then several inquiries gave been formed and their findings have not been made public. They include Justice Akilano Akiwumi commission to find those who initiated the ethnic clashes under Moi.

Emeritus Archbishop John Njenga of Mombasa who was the chairman of the Catholic Church’s Justice and Peace Commission had written twice to Attorney General Amos Wako, asking him to make the finding public to no avail.

The archbishop wrote to Wako first on August 3, 1999. The Attorney General did not respond. The archbishop wrote again on February 23, 2000 and has not received a response to date.

Similarly, in January 2000 the National Council of Churches of Kenya (NCCK) issued a statement asking the government to release the Akiwumi findings as a way of healing the wounds, to date the finding has never been made public.

Long before Akiwumi Commission was set up, a parliamentary select committee had investigated the 1991-1993 land clashes in the Rift Valley. The committee, headed by Changamwe MP Kennedy Kiliku, linked several Kanu MPs and government ministers to the violence that preceded the 1992 General Election. Kanu and a few opposition MPs ganged up against the Kiliku report and threw it out of parliament.

Throwing the findings out when it touches the government is not something new to Kenyans. The parliamentary Anti-Corruption Select Committee, the List of Shame that detailed corrupt government leaders, the Presidential Commission of Inquiry into the Cult of Devil Worship in Kenya, chaired by Nyeri Catholic Archbishop Nicodemus Kirima, presented its report to the president in June 1995. To date the government has not released the report to the public.

In August 1999, the Commission of Inquiry into the Education System of Kenya, headed by Dr. Davy Koech, presented its report to President Moi. Kenyans are still waiting for the report.

President Uhuru Kenyatta wants to form another inquiry to find out how Westage Mall was attacked. Kenyans will not be amused that the findings will never be made in public. This brings us yet to another question as to why waste tax payers money to inquiries that have never been?

Fr Joachim Omolo Ouko, AJ
Tel +254 7350 14559/+254 722 623 578
E-mail omolo.ouko@gmail.com
Facebook-omolo beste
Twitter-@8000accomole

Real change must come from ordinary people who refuse to be taken hostage by the weapons of politicians in the face of inequality, racism and oppression, but march together towards a clear and unambiguous goal.

-Anne Montgomery, RSCJ
UN Disarmament
Conference, 2002

KENYA: RADICAL APPROACH TO ENHANCING OUR SECURITY.

From: Judy Miriga

Sport-on Otieno Sungu.You speak like a man of principle who must change tactics to face, challenge and defeat an enemy of terror when security is threatened.

Security and survival is standing on shaky-grounds, instead of blame-games, people must be alert and unite to add pressure to the leadership. It is worrying to see Al-shabaab is digging deeper with more threats on Kenyans sending signals that they are turning to poaching when their source of funding is cut.

We cannot blame the President wholesomely before we get to know whether he was under some sort of siege. The President too must not speak on riddles. Why would the President read the Riot Act and who are the people he accuses of creating “aparallel centre of power”? Is the President trying to imply that he is not in control??? Is there a vacuum in leadership??? Why would thee be a parallel center of power if an elected President is in control???

President Uhuru must come clean if he wants Kenyans and the world to believe and trust in him. He need to tell the world the truth who are these people he is accusing of creating “a parallel centre of Power”. Could they be those who sent Al-shabaab to attack Westgate? Could they be those who sponsored Al-shabaab into Kenya and helped them escape??? Are the Al-shabaab incorporated into the Police force??? After I studied the ambush at the Wastegate I still wonder why both the International Media and the Local media were sent away while volunteers in plain cloths managed to get inside the mall and help whisking people out…………..Why did the police sent the Media away??? What was the police trying to hide??? Why would Uhuru not sack and relieve Francis Kimemia completely out of the Public Service for failing in his Responsibility and putting people in a very sorry state. If Kimemia was at fault, why would Uhuru continue to retain him and pay a double salary wasting publind funds???

This is a fight all Kenyans must unite to bring to end. People must inform and report all suspects wherever they live or do business and they must be rooted out through mass force otherwise if Kenyans slake, Kenyans will be taken over by events and the Al-shabaab will soon or later root out Kenyans and take control of Kenya the way M23 have done to Congo people. This is something we cannot take lightly and it is a behavior that must not be allowed to happen to Kenya.

Wake up people, wake up Kenyans………….and demand for your rights of security with Responsible leadership and equally, it is your right to demand for transparency and accountability that no one should ever take it away from the people……………….Al-shabaab must not take root in Kenya and continue to hold Kenyans hostages in compromising situation………….

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com

– – – – – – – – – – –

From: otieno sungu
Sent: Saturday, September 28, 2013 3:33 PM
Subject: RADICAL APPROACH TO ENHANCING OUR SECURITY.

Following the West Gate attack, it is necessary for the government to reassess its strategy to protect Kenyans.

In my opinion, sacking individuals or moving them around will not solve our security problem. Right now, we have an avowed enemy, Al Shabaab which does not fight conventional wars nor does it respect international conventions of engagement.

Under these circumstances, our government must also device counter measures like what Israel does with terrorist groups.First and foremost, we need to re-evaluate our intelligence bodies ability to contain terror.The NSIS must not be a toothless body that collects intelligence and hands the same over to some overweight chaps at Vigilante House to execute the prevention.The folks we have at NSIS have a level of training, education and discipline higher than the ordinary police. When ordinary police are given intelligence information, some of which is beyond their comprehension, they can only bungle up such operations. Various cases exist of bungled up operations. The Fellician Kabuga saga, a man who should be behind bars in Rwanda by now, has evaded police dragnet several times because of bungled up operations, one of which Steven Munuhe, the informer, lost his life after being set up by corrupt policemen, several operations in Mombasa and Malindi to nab terror suspects have gone wrong and suspects escaped(including the White Widow and several drug barons) because either intelligence reached the ears of greedy and corruptible police who in turn alert the criminals.

Under these circumstances, NSIS must go back to the outfit it was and its equivalents around the world such as CIA, M16, MOSSAD, FBI,KGB etc.

These intelligence arms are independent and can arrest, detain and investigate individuals. They can actually take over cases of such magnitude such as terrorism from the ordinary police. Yet our case is the opposite, NSIS has to report such to an ill equipped, corrupt and lazy police force to act. No wonder intelligence reports that we would be attacked between 14th and 21st September went unheeded.

Secondly, the NSIS should brief the President directly on matters of national security. This bureaucracy of briefing Cabinet Secretaries, some of whom are greenhorns and ill equipped to conceptualize the magnitude of what they are being briefed about is what culminated in the attack. If it is true that 4 Cabinet secretaries in Internal Security, Defense and other critical Ministries were briefed and did not act, then have a calamity in the name of Cabinet. Ole Lenku and Rachel Omamo should be ashamed enough to have resigned by now, to continue drawing a salary on such failure and on people’s blood is not only inhuman but a fraud on the tax payer.I wonder if they have conscience!

Having said that, we must now focus on illegal immigrants, fake nationals and refugees not staying in designated camps. We cannot thrive on disorder. Our immigration must be overhauled and systems put in place to ensure every person registered is tracked through a centralized and computerized registration process which consolidates information on personal identification, social security details, PIN details, passport details such that it is easy to track down money laundering, money wired for terror, individual travels, networks, business, banking trend, residence etc.

Terrorists are using our weak systems to open legitimate businesses in Kenya and proceed to wire millions into bank accounts of such businesses and use the same to recruit youth, plan terror, corrupt our police and set up strong networks, we must deny them such easy avenues of moving money around. This can only happen if we are able to track people moving huge sums of money around whose sources cannot be explained. This can only happen if KRA and Central Bank are able to track such.

We must also begin looking carefully are radical religious dogma and the people perpetrating the same. We cannot turn a blind eye and shy away from confronting the issue of radical preachers who preach hate, death, killings and martyrdom. If this be the case, then we need to know who such preachers have in mind when they offer such fiery sermons. Freedom of worship is not any ticket to break laws neither is it ticket to infringe on other people’s freedoms. It is now common information that such preachers are growing in number, one of whom killed himself planting an explosive in Garrissa town recently.

The government MUST crack down on such because they are not furthering any religious dogma as we know it but fomenting terror using the cover of Holy Places. Anyone defending or protesting their arrests must also be arrested as accomplices to plans of terror. We cannot live in a society where a few individuals distort their religious beliefs and go on a killing spree of our citizens. The President vowed to protect lives and property, he must crush such with the full force of the law irrespective of cries from sympathizers.

Lastly, we must not only wait for terrorists to strike and we defend ourselves, we must now take the battle to their doorstep,with KDF in Somalia, we must hunt down and capture or kill the masterminds and financiers, we must keep them on the run and run them out of Somalia into the open world where they will be wanted international fugitives, vulnerable and hiding with very little time, resources and personnel to plan any attacks. This is what Israel does with terrorists, kill them in their domain or smoke them out and keep them running for the rest of their short lives,until they are neutralized.

But a good place to start is our midst, the ones we already know and are linked or suspected or and sympathetic to terrorists.

Otieno Sungu.

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Uhuru reads the Riot Act on people he accuses of creating ‘a parallel centre of power’

Updated Saturday, September 28th 2013 at 21:47 GMT +3

Secretary to the Cabinet, Francis Kimemia [PHOTO:STANDARD]

By BIKETI KIKECHI
NEWS EDITOR
Although his official title is Secretary to the Cabinet, Francis Kimemia has been performing duties of the powerful office of the Head of Public Service.

But he won’t perform that role any more. That job has been assigned to former Treasury PS Joseph Kinyua.

And Kimemia’s duties have been reduced to writing invitation letters to Cabinet secretaries to attend Cabinet meetings, taking minutes during the meetings and disseminating the same to the secretaries. In a sense, the Westgate attack has cost the former Head of Civil Service and Secretary to the Cabinet his job.

At a Cabinet meeting in State House, Nairobi on Thursday, President Uhuru Kenyatta is said to have read the Riot Act on people he accused of creating a “parallel centre of power” within the government.

The President is said to have seethed with rage after it emerged that some senior officials in Harambee House, the former Office of the President, were issuing unauthorised instructions over the Westgate Mall attack.

And immediately after making his point, the President introduced Joseph Kinyua to replace former powerful PS in the Office of the President Mr Kimemia.

Kimemia was also at the Thursday meeting in his capacity as Secretary to the Cabinet.It also emerged that Kimemia chaired the National Security Advisory Committee (NSAC) meeting where the National Intelligence Service (NIS) says it provided information on the impending attack at the mall. “He is secretary to the Cabinet and only God knows in what capacity he was chairing that meeting,” said a close Uhuru ally at Harambee House.

Furious Uhuru

A Cabinet secretary told The Standard on Sunday that Uhuru was furious when he addressed the Thursday Cabinet meeting.

“Some of you think there are two centres of power. I am the President and there is also the Deputy President. There is no other centre of power,” Uhuru is said to have warned at the State House meeting. It was after he made the tough remarks that Uhuru introduced the appointment of Kinyua as the Chief of Staff and Head of Public Service.

Kinyua became the centre of attention after the meeting with all Cabinet secretaries lining up to greet and congratulate him. That effectively made him the third in command within government after Deputy President William Ruto and the second in command at State House after the President. Sources in the Cabinet informed The Standard on Sunday that the changes were made following a series of communication goofs where Kimemia was implicated.

Concern was raised when Interior Permanent Secretary Mutea Iringo called a Press conference at Harambee House when his boss Cabinet Secretary Joseph ole Lenku was addressing another one at Peponi Road in Westlands.

“It is not possible Iringo could have called that Press conference without the knowledge of Kimemia who is in charge of affairs at Harambee House,” said our source.

The Cabinet secretary was with the military generals and top police officers including Inspector General David Kimaiyo, and CID boss Ndegwa Muhoro when he was issuing the Press statement on Sunday evening.

The team had opened an operation camp near the site of the attack but Kimemia and Iringo were conspicuously absent.

“The president noticed that because the whole world could see there was somebody who was trying to create another centre of power,” said an official from the Executive Office of The President.

The management of the crisis became more complicated when the Interior ministry started tweeting and releasing conflicting information. At the same time, the police service was releasing different information from what was coming out of Harambee House.

The social media went viral on the conflicting information, which top government officials blamed on Kimemia. According to our source, Kimemia had not realised that Harambee House was no longer the Office the President.

“The last time Uhuru was at Harambee House was when he was President-elect and has since worked from his office at State House,” our source explained.

It appears Uhuru was surprised to learn that Kimemia was the head of NSAC and was getting all security briefs, but some of the information was not reaching him and other agencies.

“The information on the Westgate attack was given but it did not go anywhere. The NIS had informed them what vehicles the Al-Shabaab would use and at what time they would attack. Kimaiyo was also said to have been there and that is why NIS keeps saying they gave information to top officials at OP and police,” said our source.

State House officials say Kimemia had taken too long to understand that he was secretary to the Cabinet, whose job is to write letters of invitation, take minutes and circulate them.

Kimemia’s comment

“ Kimemia surprisingly is still chair of NSAC just like he was when he was head of public service when he is only supposed to be secretary to the Cabinet,” said another senior officer at the ministry of Interior.

When The Standard on Sunday contacted Kimemia to comment on the unfolding events, he sent an SMS saying: “No comment. I know what I am supposed to do.”

The Standard on Sunday is in possession of letters Kimemia wrote to Cabinet secretaries while designating himself as Permanent Secretary, to the Cabinet and Head of Public service.

In the letter dated 24th June, Reference number OP.CAB.9/1, the “Head of Public Service” an office that was scrapped with the beginning of Uhuru’s term, he instructed all Cabinet secretaries not to gazette any new appointments of chairpersons or chief executive officers in the government parastatals unless in concurrence with the Office of the President.

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Al Shabaab now turns to poaching to fund terror activities
Updated Saturday, September 28th 2013 at 22:27 GMT +3
By DANIEL WESANGULA

In May 2007, three Kenya Wildlife Service rangers died at the hands of Somali bandits in a pre-dawn shoot-out. The gang of poachers was crossing the Tana River on their way to Tsavo East National Park. The incursion was halted, but the eventual cost in human life from this emerging deadly trend was to be massive.

Six years later, an 18-month investigation by South African environmental groups Maisha Consulting and Elephant Action League in the involvement of Al Shabaab on trafficking ivory through Kenya established that this trade could be supplying up to 40 per cent of the funds needed to keep the merchants of terror in business.

“The deadly path of conflict ivory starts with the slaughter of innocent animals and ends in the slaughter of innocent people. It is a source of funding for terrorist organisations that transcends cruelty. It is the ‘white gold’ for African jihad; white for its colour and gold for its value,” Andrea Crosta the Executive Director and Co-Founder of the South African independent conservation organisation Elephant Action League (EAL) told The Standard on Sunday.

A parallel can be drawn between Kenya’s incursion into Somalia and increased poaching incidents within the country. With every inch of ground gained by the Kenya Defence Forces, a mile is lost back home in the never-ending war of protecting the country’s wildlife.

“Surrounded by porous borders, Kenya has long been a transit point for illegal ivory. The KWS is doing a commendable job but in an attempt to crack down on this trade, dealers looking for fast money and an easier market have turned to a new player in the game – Al Shabaab,” Crosta said.

“This reality is too close to home to pass as a mere coincidence,” Crosta said. Although poaching has been ongoing for decades, the cutting off of Al Shabaab’s income streams has forced them to look elsewhere for funding.

Kismayu had long stood as an economic bastion for the militia group. A UN Monitoring Group says outside Mogadishu, the port city was the second most important operational base for the Al Qaeda-linked militants.

In 2008, Al Shabaab took over Kismayu, the third-largest city in Somalia, after fighting a fierce three-day battle against pro-government militias. The group quickly imposed harsh administrative rules grounded in Sharia law on the port’s business community. To raise revenue, Al Shabaab increased the fees for importing and exporting goods through the port by 30 per cent.

The most important economic activities in Kismayu are fishing, the import of industrial goods and the export of primary goods such as livestock, charcoal, and khat to the Gulf States. Just from tax impositions, it is estimated that the group collected upwards of over Sh2.1 million every month. “Through trade with the gulf states it is estimated that they earned more than Sh42 million every month from charcoal trade,” a Kenyan army official not authorised to speak on Kenya’s operations in Somalia told The Standard on Sunday.

Custom tolls

In total, a UN report states that “Al Shabaab collected an estimated between Sh2.9 and Sh4.2 billion annually in custom tolls and taxes on businesses in Kismayu and two secondary ports higher up the coast.”

Almost all this money was used to further their bloody insurgencies in Somalia and neighbouring countries. The port’s fall posed serious challenges to the militants.

Quick, alternative sources of income had to be identified for the survival of the Mujahedeen.

“The network is sophisticated and is composed of poachers, small and big-time brokers, and informants, all linked to the trade in ivory and rhino horn. Our enquiries reached across the border into neighbouring Somalia where we established a link between the traders and Al Shabaab… Shabaab has been actively buying and selling ivory as a means of funding their militant operations,” Crosta said.

The investigation by EAL shows that the role of Al Shabaab in ivory trafficking is of immense concern.

“The harsh environment in which they operate, deprived of natural resources makes ivory and rhino horn trade that much more important,” says the report.

However, Al Shabaab’s role is not limited to poaching and brokerage, but they provide a crucial link in the illegal trade chain.

“Shabaab’s strength and conviction to continue its fight will increase its need for fighters, arms, ammunition and other equipment, and increase its need for funds. As the West continues to fight radical terrorist organisations through seizing assets in offshore bank accounts, straw companies and ‘charities’, these organisations, including Al Shabaab, will rely increasingly on trafficking in contraband as a source of finance,” the investigation reveals.

The report indicates that between one to three tonnes of ivory; fetching a price of roughly Sh17,000 per kilogramme, pass through the hands of Al Shabaab every month. Meaning that ivory accounts for between Sh17 million and Sh51 million every month.

So far this year, more than 8.5 tonnes of ivory have been seized. With an estimated Asia black market value of almost Sh300,000 per kilogramme, this means a total of more than Sh2.5 billion worth of ivory has been seized.

Experts say the seized ivory only represent 20 per cent of the black market circulation.

“Most of the ivory we seize is on transit from other countries and to other destinations,” Paul Mbugua, KWS spokesperson said.

So far, none of these hauls has officially been attributed to the decimated Kenyan herds.

But it is a fact that following the fall of Kismayu, Kenya has seen an exponential increase in ivory-related poaching. From 283 in 2011, 385 deaths were recorded in 2012. This year may be worse.

Already 235 elephants have been killed with 35 rhinos murdered for their horns compared to 29 the whole of last year. The highlight being the brazen daytime attack and killing of a white rhino at the Nairobi National Park — Kenya’s most guarded animal sanctuary.

“This avenue provides enough income for running a large part of their activities,” Crosta said. “This is not only dangerous for our animal population, but most importantly for our survival.”

In Kenya’s arid north, an area bordering Somalia, an AK-47 costs downwards of Sh50,000. A bullet costs as little as Sh70. An Imigration official at a border crossing earns a basic salary of between Sh40,000 and Sh50,000. With an outwardly corrupt public service, a successful poacher-terrorist will find little difficulty in arming himself, killing wildlife and eventually smuggling out his loot to the outside buyers and rearming himself for a deadlier assault in “enemy territory”.

EAL says corruption is not just the deadliest enemy of conservation but also of any other effort to push Africa forward. In their investigations not only in Kenya, corruption comes up all the time and at all levels. “If we fail to act now, militant groups like Al Shabaab will lay down their roots deep in the African landscape, destroying its heritage for generations to come. Dangerous and unpredictable, Al Shabaab’s involvement in ivory trade brings with it an alarming dimension, a dimension the world cannot afford to ignore,” concludes the report.

Religious charities

However, ivory plays just one part in the bigger picture. Foreign funding through the Hawala system and disguised religious charities pursuing ulterior agenda, supplemented by criminal activities, enables Al Shabaab to hold on to its war. The criminal activities include taxation of businesses and NGOs, trafficking in drugs, arms and humans, and involvement in counterfeit currency.

“This is not the major one, but it plays a huge part in their financing,” Crosta said.

Al Shabaab is not alone in the plunder of wildlife to sustain their insurgencies.

“Other militias involved in poaching, like the Lord’s Resistance Army or the Sudanese Janjaweed, usually kill elephants themselves, sometimes very far from home. Al Shabaab does not kill elephants. They leave the dirty job to locals and buy the ivory from known traffickers. For them ivory is just a business, like charcoal and the group remains unique in its role as a very organised buyer,” said Crosta.

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Shabelle Media Network (Mogadishu)

Somalia: Armed Men Attack Government Military Bases and Kenyan Bases in the Lower Juba Region
27 September 2013

Confrontations between armed men and Somali military llied with Kenyan troops occurred at Kulbiyow sub-district in the lower Juba region of Somalia.

Residents confirmed to Shabelle radio that the attackers believed to be members of Alshabab fighters attacked a military base manned by Kenyan peacekeeping forces and Somali military soldiers.

Heavy gunfire that lasted hours was heard at nearby settlements.

In other news armed men attacked another military base located near the Kismayu University which is operated by the Kenyan troops.

Somali government troops together with the Kenyan troops fought off the attackers after a slight confrontation which lasted for hours.

The real casualties caused by the last night attacks has not yet been revealed by the authorities of the lower Juba region

Attacker mainly from Shabab fighters frequently attack government and AMISOM bases located in the lower Juba region of Somalia.

Voice of America (Washington, DC)

Kenya Holding 8 Suspects in Mall Attack
27 September 2013

Kenyan authorities say they are still holding eight people in connection with the deadly four-day siege at a Nairobi shopping mall.

Interior Minister Joseph Ole Lenku told reporters Friday that authorities have released three other suspects.

Earlier this week, officials said five suspected militants were killed as troops and police worked to regain control of the Westgate mall.

The official total death toll from the siege stands at 72.

Investigators continue to sift through the wreckage at the partially collapsed mall. On Friday, the Kenyan Red Cross said 59 people remain missing following the attack.

Lenku said no additional bodies have been recovered from the site.

“According to police records, there are no formal or official reports of missing persons who could have been at the mall at the time of the attack.”

The Somalia-based al-Shabab extremist group claimed responsibility for the attack and is vowing to carry out other acts of violence against Kenya.

On Twitter Friday, the militant group said its attack on the Westgate mall was “just the premiere of Act 1.”

Al-Shabab says it wants Kenyan forces to withdraw from Somalia. Kenyan forces entered neighboring Somalia two years ago to help fight the militant group, which has been fighting to turn Somalia into a strict Islamic state.

The Associated Press said Friday that investigators had recovered a vehicle that was believed to have been used by some of the attackers.

Human Rights Watch urged Kenyan authorities to “swiftly” catch and prosecute the mall attackers. In a statement, the group’s Africa director, Daniel Bekele, said “nothing justifies the cruel contempt for human life” that the attackers had shown.

In another development, the International Criminal Court announced it has extended Kenyan Deputy President William Ruto’s absence from his trial until Wednesday.

The ICC said it granted the extension to allow Ruto to attend a memorial service for mall victims on Tuesday.

Ruto faces charges of crimes against humanity for his alleged role in the deadly ethnic violence that followed Kenya’s 2007 election.

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Sabahi (Washington, DC)

Kenya: Westgate Attack Reveals Gaping Security Holes
By Rajab Ramah and Julius Kithuure, , and Bosire Boniface in Garissa, 27 September 2013

Nairobi — As renewed threats and mockery from al-Shabaab have emerged in the past few days, the Kenyan people are still looking for answers as to how the bloody siege at Nairobi’s Westgate mall happened — and whether it could have been prevented.

By now, many of the details of the siege are understood: Last Saturday a group of al-Shabaab gunmen stormed the upscale shopping centre, indiscriminately shooting shoppers and tossing grenades into crowds of innocent civilians. In a standoff that lasted four days, the gunmen killed at least 67 people and held an unknown number of others as hostages until Kenyan security forces gained control of the situation Tuesday.

But in the aftermath of the attack, many questions remain unanswered: What happened to the remaining hostages? How were the attackers able to gain access to the shopping centre and hold it for so long? Who was the mastermind behind the attack and where is he or she now?

Did Kenyan security and intelligence forces receive prior warnings about the attack, and could they have prevented it?

“Terrorist attacks do not happen out of blue,” said security analyst Raymond Kipkorir Cheruiyot, a retired Kenyan armed forces colonel and co-owner of Multi Security Consultants Limited in Nairobi.

“Terrorists execute an attack when security agencies are complacent,” he told Sabahi. “Westgate shopping mall was a high profile complex, which should have been under intense 24-hour security surveillance and armed police guard. That way, the planning of this attack would have been detected and thwarted.”

Cheruiyot criticised the Kenyan government’s “disjointed” response to what he described as a sophisticated attack that “a crack team of terrorists” carefully planned and executed.

The authorities should place such high value targets under constant surveillance, review existing security arrangements and procedures, and monitor locals who sympathise with or support terrorists, he said.

“Yes, our security team response time was good, but their performance would have been more clinical had they acted on external intelligence warnings that Westgate mall was a soft target of high value to terrorists,” Cheruiyot said.

A prior terror alert

In August, security officials issued a terror alert for Kenya, saying they had received intelligence reports that at least five al-Shabaab operatives had entered Mombasa from Somalia and may have been plotting an attack to coincide with the first anniversary of radical cleric Aboud Rogo Mohammed’s killing.

“A security alert in Mombasa or Kisumu should be a concern for the entire country,” said retired army Major Bishar Hajji Abdullahi. “It is evident that someone was lax.”

“In the aftermath of this incident, those who know they are culpable should just resign, or the president [should] sack them,” Abdullahi told Sabahi.

The Kenyan Defence Forces and allied troops have done a good job dispersing al-Shabaab inside Somalia, but Kenya’s security services should have launched a manhunt for suspected militants on the home soil once they got those intelligence reports, he said.

David Ochami, a Mombasa-based journalist who covers Middle East and Horn of Africa militant groups, said there were signs of a potential attack in the weeks leading up to the Westgate siege.

Al-Shabaab and its sympathizers had been very active on social media in the weeks before the attack, for example, and their messages could have provided clues to prevent the attack, he said.

“Some of the postings may turn out to be a hoax to instil fear or posturing, but they should be deciphered and taken very seriously,” Ochami told Sabahi.

Even during the siege at the mall, al-Shabaab frequently posted messages about it on Twitter, Ochami said, underscoring the importance of paying attention to how terrorists use social media as they mount and execute such attacks.

Despite having at least five Twitter handles shut down this year, including three in the aftermath of the Westgate attack, al-Shabaab is still using the social media site to threaten and mock its enemies.

In a series of tweets Thursday, al-Shabaab criticised the Kenyan government for the apparent conflicting information it provided following the attack.

“The Kenyan government is still in disarray & it won’t be until several months when it fully comprehends exactly what took place at Westgate,” al-Shabaab said. “Their contradictory version of events is a sure sign that the Kenyan govt is beginning to suffer from severe constipation of ideas.”

The militants went on to boast of their “mesmeric performance” at Westgate, keeping Kenyans “completely enthralled for more than 100 hours”.

Al-Shabaab renewed its threats to Kenyans saying, “… despair not folks, that was just the première of Act 1”.

A tipoff Westgate attack was coming

Meanwhile, Kenyan lawmaker Mike Sonko made headlines this week by claiming that well before the attack he had received information that terrorists were planning to strike Westgate mall and other Nairobi landmarks.

He said he had relayed this information to the authorities, but they did not take it seriously enough.

According to Sonko, who represents the Westlands constituency where Westgate is located, two women approached him about three months ago with information that al-Shabaab militants had rented a house in the Parklands neighbourhood of Nairobi and were plotting such attacks.

“They told me the attacks were targeting Westgate, Village Market, the Kenyatta International Conference Centre and parliament,” he told Sabahi. “I assisted them in recording a statement with the police and intelligence officers so a further probe could be carried out.”

The National Security Intelligence Service and other security organs failed to act on the tip, Sonko said. He shared this information with the Senate on September 24th, the day the standoff at Westgate ended.

Fellow lawmaker Asman Kamama, who chairs the National Assembly’s Administration and National Security Committee, said the mall attack exposed lapses in intelligence gathering.

“The way the attacks were carried out, it was well co-ordinated, meaning it was something that was well planned and executed,” Kamama, a United Republican Party member who represents Baringo County, told Sabahi.

“And for our intelligence to have had no clue on the impending attacks, means there [were] huge security failures that we must audit and [for which we must] hold individuals culpable,” he said.

Officials respond

The attack on Westgate not only stunned the nation but appeared to catch defenders of the homeland off guard, officials told Sabahi.

“In all honesty, this was the first time Kenya has witnessed such an audacious terrorist attack on a mall using guns,” said Director of Police Reforms Jonathan Kosgei. “We knew of bombs, [but] this new style was hard to predict. However, the security forces did their best to contain the situation in the prevailing disadvantaged circumstances.”

“This attack will probably precipitate a national debate [about] whether to arm security guards or not,” he told Sabahi. “With only a wooden baton and a whistle, guards are so vulnerable and totally unable to stop an armed assault.”

Another factor to consider is how Westgate revealed al-Shabaab’s dramatic change in military tactics to commando-like operations, according to Western region Commissioner James ole Seriani.

“They want to inflict maximum damage which the roadside improvised explosive devices were not achieving,” he told Sabahi. “It is the same tactic they used in Garissa last year when they stormed and opened fire in two churches and hotels leaving more than 20 dead.”

The Westgate massacre is a wakeup call, Seriani said, and the public should be alert so that terrorists can be neutralised before they cross into Kenya.

The Kenyan government was blamed, too, for issuing conflicting information to the press as the terror at Westgate unfolded.

But Principal Secretary for Internal Security Mutea Iringo defended the government, saying it was deliberate tactic aimed at throwing the terrorists off balance.

“Silence is also a tactical weapon,” he told Sabahi. “You do not want to engage in a public shouting match with a terrorist organisation.”

While it was an unfortunate incident, Iringo said he hoped the Westgate attack would encourage world leaders to take action against al-Shabaab.

“Al-Shabaab is now not only a Somali headache but part and parcel of a global terrorist network that needs the world governments to dismantle,” he said.

Top security officers are expected to appear before parliament next week as part of the investigation into the terrorist attack.

“The time for responsibility and accountability has come,” defence committee chairman Ndung’u Gethenji said, according to Kenya’s Daily Nation.

“We shall conduct a thorough, in-depth, incisive and unforgiving investigation into the events and the failures that led to the attack,” he said at parliament shortly after his committee held a closed door meeting Thursday.

Gethenji said the joint committee, comprising members of the defence and national security committees, will call Kenya’s intelligence chief, the Interior Cabinet Secretary, the Inspector General of Police and other top security officials to shed light on the attack.

Hackers invade CJ Willy Mutunga communication channels, judiciary promises to act

From: Gordon Teti

REPUBLIC OF KENYA THE JUDICIARY OFFICE OF THE CHIEF JUSTICE September 27, 2013 STATEMENT ON THE HACKING OF THE CHIEF JUSTICE’S EMAIL AND OTHER ACTS OF CRIMINALITY

For a while now, the Judiciary has been grappling with the vulnerability of its communication, which has manifested itself in hacked e-mail accounts, the tapping of telephones, secret taping of meetings and the doctoring of official documents. The prevalence of these surveillance tactics has concerned the institution a great deal.

This country has fought long and hard to eliminate the culture of fear. Many people have paid a heavy price to eliminate this culture of being gratuitously spied on. In the past, reports have been made to the National Intelligence Service about people hacking into the Chief Justice’s Twitter account; and his email account has similarly been hacked in the past.

Keen to prevent the entrenchment of a mini police state within the institution, various efforts have been made to test whether or not the communication infrastructure in the Judiciary is secure. It cannot be normal that meetings are secretly taped, telephone conversations are habitually tapped and the email account of the Chief Justice – the head of an arm of government – can be routinely hacked.

The Judiciary leadership is determined to eliminate this surveillance culture by closing in on the small, cowardly and criminal enterprise that believes that it can violate official and private communication at will. Anyone who can hack an email can also doctor documents, and is essentially a criminal who deserves to be dealt with in accordance with the law.

This level of investment in surveillance is a clear indication of an overwhelming desire to control all communication. It also suggests that those behind it have something sinister to hide. It is a brazen attempt to take the institution hostage for financial, political, and administrative interests. Even judicial consultation and decisions would be at risk if this culture persists.

Whereas there are ongoing actions to review and audit the institution’s information and technology systems, the Judiciary is also investigating possible acts of criminality arising from the prevailing circumstances. The content of the statements published in a section of the media in reference to ongoing investigations within the Judiciary will not draw comment for now.

Indeed, as everyone is aware, the Judicial Service Commission has scrupulously followed due process and studiously avoided issuing statements on these investigations to steer clear of prejudicing the public interest or private reputations.

The Judiciary leadership is determined to conclude this matter in the right forum, and not to try any issue in the media.

Kwamchesti Makokha
Communication Office
Office of the Chief Justice

NOTE from the desk of Gordon Teti
It is payback time for the “six people” who presided over the presidential election petition at the Supreme Court following the contested Kenya presidential elections in March 2013. Surely, whoever said choices have consequences! Mutunga and his team are reaping the benefits of endorsing a rigged presidential victory.

Kenya: westgate.Mkawasi’s take / FB

From: Kuria-Mwangi

Good observations MK. Those conspiracy theorists only help the terrorists as they read and watch us turns ourselves into the fools. Remember those who denied that the Holocaust never happened? May be it made the neo Nazis happy the way those spinning these conspiracy theories make the terrorists happy as they read them.

What we need is a sober approach to this menace, so I join Omollo and Wams is stating that yours is a sober piece.

On Fri, Sep 27, 2013 at 1:48 PM, Geoffrey Omollo wrote:

A sober take.

“Never be guilty of sacrificing any portion of TRUTH on the altar of PEACE.”J. C. Ryle.

Date: Fri, 27 Sep 2013 12:40:08 -0400
Subject: westgate.Mkawasi’s take / FB
From: wams2006@ . . .

Mkawasi Mcharo Hall

Options for this story

It’s easy in the midst of a storm to grab onto all that is sensational, all that is devoid of truth, all that trashes and negates real experiences both traumatic and heroic, and spread it like a virus. Be careful what you lend credence to in the name of “sharing.”

Desist from being willing transmitters of clips and writings authored by those who love and thrive in the darker arts of weaving propaganda and conspiracies that block the path to truth and justice.

Yes, question, be very critical, be open-minded. But do not be the consummate undertaker who excitedly keeps burying the truth on behalf of creative self-serving liars. They love you for your free services, but mostly, they laugh at your gullibility. Be smart.

Mkawasi Mcharo Hall Wams, thanks for the question. Glad to answer it.

*moving back to podium.

1. Deniers: Those who deny it ever happened. A video clip getting thousands of hits internationally is already out “proving” that Nairobi’s Westgate attack never happened. Denying tragedies of great magnitude is common, e.g., Holocaust deniers. With time, it becomes a school of thought that helps bury truth, deny justice to those who seek it and invalidating the suffering of others. Unfortunately, I’ve seen this Westgate-never-happened clip by an American make its rounds among Kenyans, some who are actually entertaining the thought that someone cooked it all up for some selfish gains. The only person benefitting is the creator of the clip. It takes but one minute to research and see that this is someone who loves and thrives in this trade. If no disaster happens, he could arrange a public massacre of his own family just to create a denial. Cold.

2. Conspiracy theorists: Those who are spending hours building intricate plots “shockingly” revealing who really masterminded the whole macabre thing, usually some politician who stood to gain from such a disaster, and if such a politician lost loved ones, it was all part of the calculated collateral damage. The Kenyan conspiracy theorist are not the kind that watch too many Who-killed-JFK movies, they are the kind who are too sickeningly partisan, intent on grabbing any opportunity to destroy a political enemy. The worst thing about conspiracy theories, intriguing as they are, drawing us in with breathtaking what-ifs and who-done-it, is that they stop us from actually knowing the truth.

3. Propagandists: We could spend a semester on this one. In brief, they are on both sides, the good and the bad. I’m concerned about the bad. Right now, while we know the general truth of great loss and suffering, we don’t know the complete “inside story” of what exactly happened, the who-knew-what-and-when. It’s in the search for the inside story that we are coming undone. All we have is the spin from journalists and bloggers who claim they have the real scoop, some planted, some just cheap speculation. It’s good to engage in vibrant debate and questioning in the absence of the whole truth. But unfortunately a number of Kenyans are already using cheap propaganda to escalate partisan CORD-Jubilee wars, which in Kenyanese comes translates to a reignition of ethnic strife. So much for WeAreOne.

All the above hinder us from seeking and knowing the real truth at a time when there are so many unanswered questions. Those who hold the truth are happy about the sensational spread of denials, conspiracies and propaganda

Kenya: Who is Securing US?

From: Ali Abdallah

Westgate; The questions that need to be answered!!

What happened to our country was very tragic and horrific and most of us cannot bear the thought of what the victims experienced during the events of the horrific tragedy.

I appreciate what the defense forces, police and all security units involved eventually did and in no way whatsoever do I take their effort for granted.

However, it is time we looked at the situation with the harsh reality of what it is.

1. Is this the first hostage situation?

We do acknowledge the fact that Westgate was probably targeted due to; its location is an upmarket shopping complex frequented by foreigners (expats mainly) as well as wealthy Kenyans and in all fairness, this is the first terrorist related hostage situation of this complexity on Kenyan soil; however it is not the first of its kind in this country.

· Please allow me to remind fellow Kenyans of the number of car-jacking cases that happen in Nairobi alone on a weekend?

· Remember how many cases we have of kidnap and ransom cases in this country, mainly in Nairobi and its immediate environs?

· How many cases of robbery in public transport vehicles do we know of, if we have not experienced them ourselves?

· How many cases of matatu hijackings take place?

These are but a few of the local terror situations that the common mwananchi goes through on a daily/weekly/monthly basis. And my question is before we go complementing security forces in the country, what has the police force done to tackle this small* cases? (Small in comparison to the Westgate attack)

In all fairness, each and every Kenyan has experienced the harsh reality of Police hostility even when one is reporting a case.

We all know that Police hotlines are almost never useful; as was proven during a TV interview where they called the Hotline numbers LIVE!!

2. How long have we been receiving threats

Our country has received a number of threats, which in fact was a major driving force pushing Kenya to go into Somalia; this led to grenade attacks in the CBD, killings in various areas of the country and the eventual beef up in security within the country which was of course led to the financial boost of “security” services. This was followed by scandals of fake surveillance equipment being supplied to Kenya and the eventual question we all asked when we frequented a mall:

· Do they (askari’s) know what they are looking for?

· Why wasn’t I frisked even after the detector beeped?

· Why wasn’t the inside of my car checked? Areas such as the glove compartment etc.?

· Why wasn’t I searched when inside my vehicle?

· Why isn’t there a lady guard to check my companion?

· Why wasn’t the mzungu in front of me searched while I am being stopped?

3. How many victims died?

Why do we all have this gut feeling that the government is lying to us? I am Kenyan and I deserve to know how many of my brethren fell victims to the attacks.

With such secrecy and inconsistency over the matter, one can only speculate:

· We know how our police force has previously killed innocent lives.

· Could some victims have fallen been caught in “friendly fire”?

· We did hear that some GSU were accidentally shot by KDF! This may not have been verified, but I would like to know if there is a possibility if any of this happening?

4. How many attackers were there?

Initial reports claimed 5 attackers being led by a woman. This reports eventually matured to a number of 10-15. What intel was used to provide such information? A variation of 10-15 is too big a variation (50%).

If only 5 were killed by our forces, where were the others? If they were on a suicide mission;

· Why did the remaining 10 (if there were 10) let the 5 face the forces while they barricaded themselves?

· Why (according to certain claims) would they dress up as women only to change their attire later?

· Why hold up for so long if they had all the explosives?

· Initially it was claimed that the KDF started the fire, at what point were the explosives set off?

· ……..Etc!!!

5. How was this planned in our country?

There have been claims of intelligence having knowledge about the presence of this group in Kenya and planning of this attack, if this is deemed to be true;

· Why was it allowed to happen?

· How was it allowed to happen?

· Who allowed it to happen?

6. How prepared is Kenya

Kenya has barely recovered from the fire at the country’s biggest international airport. The fire was an eye opener on the lack of preparedness we have for crisis situations.

We still experience massacres in the country at the Moyale border where people mercilessly kill each other; Remember Tana River!!!

· Fire brigades have been known to have a reputation for “time keeping”;

· Police have a reputation for collaborating with thieves and basically doing nothing about everything.

· The same forces apparently let go of an assailant even after it was pointed out to them by a victim.

The questions are endless, but I would like to say this; certain factors played a role either directly or indirectly in the unfortunate happenings that take place in our country. Some of which are:

· Poor command/hierarchy of command in security forces.

· Poorly educated, prepped and ill-prepared security forces as well as supporting services such as fire.

· Poor communication between various security forces.

· Corruption, the mother of all evil in Kenyan society.

· Neglect of the forces from the government, to ensure the forces are up to date on security measures in the 21st century.

· Lack of proper remuneration of security forces.

· Improper blending in of the judicial system to work hand in hand with police force.

Is this going to be an eye opener or are we going to do what Kenyans are good at, wake up in a months’ time and live like nothing happened?

It is time we questioned our law makers where our money is going to if we cannot get security within our borders, our businesses are not secure, our families are not secure and in essence our livelihood is not secure.

As they are busy giving themselves hefty bonuses, surrounding themselves with heavy security for themselves.
Who is securing us?

Yours Truly,
Ali Abdallah.

Kenya: Hard questions Kenyans want answered after Westgate terror attack

From: geoffrey osiemo

Evans/Judy,

May be the Chines are not seeing the world and life the way we see it. May be they are in another realm looking down at the drama of life.

Did you hear them when Assad gasses people recently?

May be they talk in a language we do not understand.

What of the Russians? I used to hear of them during the hay day of Jaramog Oginga Odinga. Nowadays they have nothing to do with Africa.

Anyway, may be these guys have enough on their plates in their own countries. And even before they talk the Kenya government has to come out clean. These terrorists were known and reported to the security agencies and what has happened to them after the massacre. The way the government is releasing the information is disconcerting indeed.

There could be more that we do not know and we may not know.

May the Almighty God rest rest the souls of the diseased in eternal peace. And may those who are injured and will remain with the scares of the tragedy know that by the Grace of God they are alive.

Namaste.
GOO.

– – – – – – – – – –

From: Evans MACHERA
Sent: Wednesday, September 25, 2013 8:52 PM
Subject: ??? Hard questions Kenyans want answered after Westgate terror attack

Judy,

China have their interests and style of approach to international issues guided by their foreign policy ;- be friendly and make economic gains. Anything else,ikae.

So get valuers to count the losses, and tender for the mall re-building and re-construction and you will see China in true colours.

Peace be still.

Evans MACHERA

From: Judy Miriga
Sent: Thursday, September 26, 2013 3:01 AM
Subject: ??? Hard questions Kenyans want answered after Westgate terror attack

Good People!

Hard questions indeed with so many questions that continue to remain unanswered………Where are the arrested terrorists ???

AND why does it take China so long to send their rambi rambi?

Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com/

From: Tebiti Oisaboke
Sent: Wednesday, September 25, 2013 10:30 AM
Subject: ANGRY

Gesare

I’m equally extremely angry as you are. Reason being that, the Jubilee Gov’t doesn’t want to tell us and the world the truth and the whole truth about this heinous attack on our land and its holding everything to its self. We are being given an unconfirmed reports about how many victims lost their lives here and there. First on Sun the Red Cross had 68 deaths and 150 injured and when Buresident Junior addressed the nation he gave us a much lower figure. Which is which and whom do we believe? Today the Al Shabab are claiming that they massacred 137 while the Junior’s Gov’t disputes that figure and says its only 72 victims. Another interesting thing to note is that, why would Kamwana turn down any kind of assistance offered to solve this menace from the Western countries? Amazingly this wasn’t the first time he has done this. He did it before when the Int’l arrival terminal at Embakasi Airport was touched a few moons ago. How much hatred do we have for the Western leaders to decline even the slightest assistance when we are really in need?????
May God bless Kenya’s Wanjikus

TOI

——————————

From: Fortunato Gesare
Sent: Tuesday, September 24, 2013 3:45 PM
Subject: ANGRY

I must express my anger at what has been going on in my Country. I have resisted saying something but my silence is killing me because as I look at pictures, watch TV, and listed to Radio, the more I get angry and frustrated…GOD BLESS MY COUNTRY and may you bestow peace to those equally angry.

“Usually when people are sad, they don’t do anything. They just cry over their condition. But when they get angry, they bring about a change.”
? Malcolm X

Hard questions Kenyans want answered after Westgate terror attack
Updated Wednesday, September 25th 2013 at 17:15 GMT +3
By Digital Reporter

Nairobi, Kenya: Kenyans have asked prodding questions directed at government authorities and demanded for answers which the State has avoided answering since the Saturday massacre.

Without a detailed blow by blow account of what transpired at the upscale shopping mall, questions were fired from the citizens as well as a section of members of the National Assembly even as State House Spokesman Manoah Esipisu ducked some questions from the media.

From questions about the effectiveness of the National Intelligence Service, to how the sophisticated, well planned and executed massacre happened and why it was not prevented dominated discussions online and on FM radio stations.

Members of the public spoke as the media awaited government briefing on the progress of investigations from the Interior Cabinet Secretary Joseph Ole Lenku later Wednesday afternoon.

Their questions exposed how the Jubilee Government communicated incoherently at times contradicting each other.

Kenyans are also demanding to be furnished with the official death toll of the massacre especially the number of people buried in the mall after it was taken over by security forces. Some are demanding to be shown bodies and pictures of the terrorists arrested and those killed.

Below are some of the Tough questions:

1. How many people are still unaccounted for?

2. How many terrorists were involved in the attack? Are they all accounted for?

3. Amb Amina Mohammed said there was at least one female terrorist whom she identified as a Briton. Interior Cabinet Secretary Ole Lenku in a press briefing said they were all men. Could you clarify? Was Samantha Lewthwaite one of the attackers?

4. What of the reports the at least one terrorist escaped from Westgate? Again, Amb Amina Mohammed in her Al Jazeera English interview suggested some might have hidden among hostages and escaped. Who were the people arrested in JKIA? Were any of them in Westgate? Will any arrested terrorists be put on trial here or handed over to other states?

5. Are there any terrorists on the loose in the city who are yet to be captured?

6. Will there be an inquiry into the attack to identify potential improvements to intelligence and security? What powers of investigative authority will the group tasked with the inquiry be given?

7. Was fire on terrace started by terrorists to burn hostages and swap identities? How many escaped?

8. Will the findings be made public after the investigations?

9. What of the cars that dropped the attackers at Westgate? Are the cars still there? If not, are they being pursued? (I don’t want to delete someone elses question, I simply ask that you kindly consider this -> https://twitter.com/PoliceKE/status/382505737421070337 ) – @mwirigi

10. Who owns the Westgate Mall building? Have they been taken in for questioning?

11. There are reports of the attackers renting a store at the mall. Are these reports true and is the landlord being pursued for information on the same? Have they arrested the staff for questioning?

12.Ten suspects have been arrested for questioning. Are they part of the attackers? Are we still safe?

13. What is the security forces’ explanation to the story of the escaped hostage who says one of the gunmen blended with them and walked out as a hostage?

14. When did the terrorists get into the country? How? Where? How soon will you be able to determine this?

15. If the delay in using brute force to overcome the gunmen by Sunday morning was because there were hostages whose lives the authorities wanted to save, how many hostages were saved since Sunday Morning?

16. If it really was just about the attack, why keep hostages alive for three days…why not just kill everyone and blow the building up?

17. Do the police have access to architectural plans of Westgate and the air vents checked to ensure no terrorist is hiding?

18. Was there anyway to assess those rescued like a debrief room where details were recorded ( i.e. biographical data, contacts etc)?. How do we know who was there?

19. In the last government, there were many rumours that Kenyan Passports and Id’s were being sold for Sh300,000 . Is it possible to inspect and record how many of them were undeserving and recall them and/or deport or arrest those who own them? Also, Is it possible to use this evidence to jail those responsible for selling our country?

20. Was the CCTV footage made available to the police?

21. Why was the IG Kimaiyo asking for pictures to be sent to him on Twitter?

22. How many hostage takers have been killed?

23. When will a report by NSIS be made public with an analysis of the security situation prior and after the attack? Were we caught by surprise? If so,why? Did we know or at least suspect something like this? If so, what did we do to try averting the same? And most important, what’s the security position now?

25. In times of disasters and any such tragedies, why can’t we have a clear command structure to ensure that orders and coordination comes from one person and thereby eliminate the possibility of terrorist gelling with victims and escaping so easily?

26. Why was there conflicting information from different government sources?

28. What is the role of Rachel Omamo in the security military operation?

29.Were Kenyan Forces in control of CCTV control room by 11am Tuesday morning?

30. Can we see the bodies of the “neutralized” terrorists?

31. What do we stand to gain by KDF being in Somalia?

33. Is it true that Samantha Lewthwaite aka White Widow bribed to avoid a jail term ? Who did she bribe? Where is she? What does she know?

34. Samantha Lewthwaite has been to Kenya twice (In 2011 and 2012). How did she stroll through our airports undetected? She’s been on FBI’s and Interpol’s watch list since 20.

35. Why won’t they tell us how many hostages were rescued or where they were taken to? Why is there so much secrecy?

36. Did the Kenyan military have access to the basement parking by Tuesday 11am?

38. Every crime has a fixer. How is it possible that someone can procure such a huge cache of arms and ship it without our NSIS knowing? If the arms were imported, what are we doing to secure our borders?

39. Somalia. Let’s talk about Kenya’s invasion of Somalia. Are we finally paying for this? And if so, how can we be sure that victory is ours when victory for now just means reclaiming Westgate? What about the future?

40. Why is Kenya a terrorist target for the ninth time? What have we done? More importantly, why is the Government not able to protect its citizens? For how long will we react instead of preventing?

41. Ole Lenku said fire that started on Monday was caused by mattresses being torched by terrorists. Some time before, he had claimed that the terrorists had been “contained” in a section in one of the “upper floors”. If this is true, how did the terrorists gain entry into Nakumatt on the second floor? Better yet, isn’t Nakumatt on the ground floor in Westgate mall?

44. Why didn’t the government jam telephone network and ask service providers to block signals to Nairobi area once the magnitude was clear on day 2?

45. The public have a right to know how many citizens were killed. Fudging information won’t help. Also, information on terrorists caught, killed, and those who escaped. Will we be told the truth?

51. Are there underground tunnels eg sewage ducts at the mall that could act as passageways?

52. What do MPs and “national politicians” gain by insisting that the terrorists did not have a religious angle to their approach (even if misconceived)? Are politicians being genuine, naive or simply avoiding to explore the root cause?

53. Why would a 27-year-old soldier who has served for only 4 years be detailed to undertake an operation of that magnitude?

55. How safe are our borders?

56. What caused the floors to collapse?

62. How many children died?

65. Why did it take more than 30 minutes for the security system to get activated and act from the time the first distress signal was sent?

TODAY | September 25, 2013
Mall survivor: I was rescued by American security forces
http://www.today.com/video/today/53101428/#53101428
TODAY
TODAY | September 25, 2013
Mall survivor: I was rescued by American security forces

Bendita Malakia, a 30-year old World Bank employee, said she was certain she was rescued from Kenya’s Westgate mall siege — where there was gunfire and even grenades — by American security forces who led her out to safety. NBC’s Tom Costello reports.

Exclusive video shows chaos of Kenya mall attack

http://www.nbcnews.com/video/nightly-news/53097933/#53097933
The new images from the inside the Westgate Mall in Kenya are sobering: a family playing dead to avoid harm, shoppers escaping, and a child being carried to safety. More than 60 people died in the terrorist attack, most of them civilians. NBC’s Ron Allen reports.

From:Jagem K’Onyiego
Sent: Wednesday, September 25, 2013 4:36 PM
Subject: THIS what is called a banana republic/ deny it and pay with your life.

I hope Sonko is not making it an official alibi for a cover up. Where are those Terrorists who were killed? Anybody with their pictures?
Jagem

On Wed, Sep 25, 2013 at 1:25 AM, Clement Oginga wrote:

If what Sonko is saying here is true then I think the Police have a big question to answer. If they received reports about these thugs and they did nothing, I say the officers who received that report should be identified and relieved of their duties immediately. This is not a laughing matter.

On Tue, Sep 24, 2013 at 11:02 PM, account146w wrote:
———–

Kenya info blackout? Extraordinary lack of detail about Westgate seige

How many really died? Why no mugshots of militants? Where are the hostages? Why no blow-by-blow? Why no clear information from Kenyatta?

Even as President Uhuru Kenyatta was giving his televised address on Tuesday, telling the world that the siege of Nairobi’s Westgate mall was over, Kenya’s “netizens” were celebrating.

With the hashtag #WeAreOne, praise for President Kenyatta, the Kenya Defense Forces, the police and the Red Cross swamped Twitter and other social media, as did elegies for the 61 civilians and six security officers the president said died during the assault.

Soon, however, the tone had noticeably hardened: “SO. MANY. QUESTIONS” tweeted @kenyanpundit. Others pointed out that Kenya’s authorities had “not provided a single mugshot of the attackers,” as did @bonifacemwangi.

By Wednesday, a list of 85 questions drawn up by Kenyan citizens was doing the rounds online, demanding answers from their government that was either unable nor unwilling to clarify fundamental aspects of the 80-hour ordeal.

RECOMMENDED: Think you know Africa? Take our geography quiz.

During the Tuesday speech, Kenyatta did not clarify the final number of people who died. He said 61 civilians, six troops and five attackers were dead but did not spell out if that was in addition to a Kenya Red Cross toll of 62 already counted fatalities.

A further 71 people are registered missing, the charity said Wednesday.

More bodies, including those of the militants, were buried in rubble where a portion of the Westgate Shopping Mall collapsed in the last hours of the siege, Kenyatta said. But he was unable to say how many attackers there were, or how they ferried apparently large amounts of ammunition or conspicuously heavy weapons into the four-story mall.

Perhaps most disturbingly for those still waiting for news of missing loved ones, he did not mention the word “hostage” once in his 15-minute address.

Early reports from the mall siege gave the impression that there were perhaps dozens of people being held after the first waves of hundreds who managed to escape as the attackers took over the complex.

The Kenya Red Cross established an emergency field hospital in the basement car park of a Hindu community hall, to “be prepared for many injured”, according to Rashmi Shah, one of the center’s managers.

In the event, fewer than 10 people were treated there, and most of those were soldiers. By Tuesday, the triage hospital unit was shut.

Now among the most urgent questions that has been raised: “Where are the hostages?”

Critics are raising allegations against national intelligence and security forces of how such a heavily armed band of foreigners was allowed to enter Kenya, and then to transfer their arsenal into the guarded mall.

“My position, and the police will investigate this, is that there was a very serious lapse in security, which may have gone on for six months,” said Laban Onditi Rao, vice-chairman of the Kenyan National Chamber of Commerce, who was communicating with the mall’s owners and security staff during the siege.

“There is the idea that they hired a shop there, and that would give them accessibility all over the mall, and would allow some of them to pass security easily because they would be known,” he said.

Responding to this, Manoah Esipisu, Kenya’s presidential spokesman, said late Tuesday that, “we’re leaving nothing to chance” in the investigation, including whether the militant gang had rented a shop at Westgate, or that they had an insider helping them.

As demands for answers to still unexplained aspects of the assault grew on Wednesday, Mr. Esipisu’s phone was switched off.

One Kenyatta administration official said that “there seems to be a shutdown of information” within the government, and no real details are getting out to its citizens. The official requested anonymity to speak candidly about internal government operations.

Meanwhile, US, Israeli and British forensics experts were preparing to enter the mall to help Kenyan authorities assess what is now a vast crime scene. It is expected that their inquiries will continue for at least a week.

“We will provide additional assistance in the coming days to investigate this attack and to bring its organizers and perpetrators to justice,” said Robert Godec, the US ambassador to Kenya. “We will continue to work together with Kenya to stop the scourge of terrorism.”

Kenyatta said that “we cannot confirm the details at present” of reports that two American citizens and a Briton were among the attackers.

By the end of Wednesday in Nairobi, a new hashtag had emerged, #WeAreOne_dering.

RECOMMENDED: Think you know Africa? Take our geography quiz.
———-

U.S. Agents Already Sifting Rubble of Kenya Mall Attack
NAIROBI, Kenya, Sept. 25, 2013
By ALEX MARQUARDT, PIERRE THOMAS, MIKE LEVINE, JAMES GORDON MEEK and RUSSELL GOLDMAN
http://abcnews.go.com/International/kenya-mall-terrorists-rented-shop-months-attack/story?id=20365562
Next Video Kenya Mall Attack: Who Were the Attackers?
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Kenyan Shopping Mall Siege is Over
James Gordon Meek More from James »
Investigative Producer
via Good Morning America

U.S. federal agents have joined a team of international investigators to sift through the still smoking rubble of the Kenyan shopping mall that was the site of a four-day terrorist rampage, beginning the painstaking process of looking for clues about the attackers, officials said today.

Calling the investigation an “elaborate process,” Joseph Ole Lenku, Kenya’s interior secretary, said investigators from the U.S. and INTERPOL were already on the scene looking for fingerprint, DNA and ballistic evidence.

He said the investigation of the site will take at least a week, but investigators did not expect to find a significant number of victims still trapped in the rubble.

“We are convinced that there will be insignificant if any bodies still holed up there except for the terrorists,” he told reporters today.

The investigation has now turned to how the terrorists, associated with the Somalia-base Islamist group al-Shabab, were able to execute the attack using machine guns, grenades and homemade bombs that killed at least 72 people.

An interior ministry spokesman said today that the band of assailants had rented a shop in the mall for three months, storing weapons and plotting Saturday’s rampage.

Later that same day, Lenku said that claim was only a “rumor” until it had been verified by the investigation.

“As to whether they had a shop in the mall is something we cannot say categorically,” Lenku said.

He said five suspects were killed and 10 taken into custody. Authorities, he said, were working to establish the identities and nationalities of the suspects.

A U.S. official briefed on the Nairobi investigation says American authorities still cannot confirm whether any Americans were involved in the Nairobi attack, a possibility that was raised by Kenya’s President Uhuru Kenyatta and the country’s foreign minister. Nairobi officials also said they were checking reports that a British woman took part in the assault.

The U.S. official says authorities intend to conduct the necessary analysis, including biometric analysis and fingerprints.

A former diplomat who lives in Nairobi and maintains Kenyan government and international security contacts told ABC News Tuesday night that intelligence services in Kenya had detected surveillance of Westgate Mall being conducted in the past year, but said hard intelligence it was being targeted for a terror attack wasn’t uncovered.

“The intelligence hasn’t been specific,” the former diplomat told ABC News. The former diplomat described the al-Shabab attack as “strictly for revenge” because of Kenya’s help in defeating the terror group al-Shabab in Somalia. The ex-diplomat said Muslims were “executed” alongside non-Muslims in Westgate. “It was completely indiscriminate murder,” he said.

Kenya beings three days of national mourning today to remember the victims as troops dig through the rubble of the building, scouring for bodies of victims and terrorists buried after part of the complex collapsed.

Troops remain deployed at the Westgate mall following the conclusion of tense four-day siege, which began Saturday when armed members of al-Shabab opened fire on shoppers.

The death toll is expected to rise as Kenyan forces sift through the rubble after three floors of the mall collapsed Tuesday during the final hours of fighting.

Dorcas Mwangi said she hid from the attackers for four hours under a pile of suitcases. She says her brother texted her, warning the terrorists were killing non-Muslims. Her brother sent an Islamic prayer so she could memorize it.

“I was able to memorize it… In case they found me,” she said.

American Bendita Malakia, now back on U.S. soil, says she hid in the backroom of a home goods store for nearly five hours while the terrorists controlled the mall in the opening hours of the siege.

“We just heard explosions and starting crawling out. It was very, very, very scary,” Malakia recounted.

A haunting image emerged Tuesday showing a family playing dead until a plain clothed police officer came to their rescue.

——

Who Is the ‘White Widow’? U.K. Mom Could Have Kenyan Connection
By Beth Greenfield, Shine Staff
Posts
By Beth Greenfield, Shine Staff | Healthy Living – 3 hours ago

Samantha Lewthwaite (Photo: AFP)Hostage reports that a white woman was among the armed terrorists in Kenya’s recent deadly attack at the Westgate Shopping Mall in Nairobi have prompted rampant speculation that it could have been a suspect wanted for years by officials: Samantha Lewthwaite, otherwise known as the “White Widow.” More on Shine: Who Is Assata Shakur, the FBI’s Most Wanted Female Terrorist? “Nothing is being ruled out,” noted State House spokesman Manoah Esipisu regarding whether the woman could be among the dead hostage takers in the mall’s rubble. Lewthwaite got her nickname from the British press after her husband, Germaine Maurice Lindsay, was named as one of the four suicide bombers in the deadly London “7/7” attacks on the subway system in 2005. And although she initially condemned his actions, she went missing shortly thereafter, arousing suspicions, and later emerged as a terrorist suspect in her own right. According to BBC journalist Peter Taylor, who just returned from Kenya, Lewthwaite has become a sort of “mythological figure,” adding, “If she is dead, then she would have achieved the kind of martyrdom that her husband, Germaine Lindsay, achieved.” Still, some doubt that she could have played a role in the mall siege, as female involvement in such an attack would be “very unusual,” according to CNN security analyst Peter Bergen. “Typically these groups are misogynist,” he said. “Their view is the woman should be in a home and shrouded in a body veil.” More on Yahoo: Terrorists Claim 137 Killed in Kenya Mall Attack

So why do so many speculate that Lewthwaite was involved? Here’s what we know about the 29-year-old mother of three (or four):Her childhood. Born in Buckinghamshire, England, to British soldier Andy Lewthwaite and Christine Allen, Samantha spent much of her early life in the town of Aylesbury and in Northern Ireland. A local politician in Aylesbury, Raj Khan, who knew her family socially, told the BBC that he is surprised at the idea of her involvement in Kenya — especially speculation that puts her in a leadership role. “She was an average, British, young, ordinary girl. She had a very great personality. She didn’t have very good confidence,” he said. “She was not strong-headed. And that’s why I find it absolutely amazing that she is supposed to be the head of an international criminal terrorist organization,” he said. Her conversion. Lewthwaite converted to Islam when she was a teenager, with the aid of a local Muslim family she befriended, according to the BBC. She stood out at school after that, teacher Novid Shaid told the radio network. “She seemed to be really proud wearing the hijab; there was a bubbly feeling around her,” he said, adding that, eventually, “we noticed her wearing the full jalabiya [robe], which some converts tend to do when they become more serious,” he said. She then studied religion at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London for two months.Her marriage. The teenager met Lindsay in an Islamic Internet chat room, according to the BBC. They married after a few months, made their home in Aylesbury, and soon had a child together. Reports say that she had two or three more children after the birth of her second one, in 2005. Her link to the London bombings. Lindsay, a Jamaican native and Islamic convert who became a radical terrorist, was one of four people who set off bombs in the subways, killing 56 people, including themselves. Pregnant at the time with their second child, Lewthwaite, then just 21, condemned her husband’s actions as “abhorrent” and told the Sun, “How these people could have turned him and poisoned his mind is dreadful. He was an innocent, naïve and simple man. I suppose he must have been an ideal candidate.” Shortly thereafter, she disappeared.Lewthwaite with Lindsay and their first child. Her reemergence. Lewthwaite has been wanted by Kenyan police on terrorist charges since 2011, for allegedly plotting an attack on “Western targets” in Kenya, reported the Telegraph. She was believed to be on the run in East Africa, possibly with Habib Ghani, who might have been married to her. The two were charged for allegedly working closely with Jermaine Grant (currently on trial in Kenya) when police discovered their bombing plots. Lewthwaite vanished. Earlier this month, Ghani reportedly died in an ambush outside of Mogadishu after fleeing Somali terrorist group al-Shabaab — the same group claiming responsibility for the latest Kenya attack. Her ties to South Africa. Lewthwaite used an assumed South African identity to take out bank loans and rent property in Johannesburg, eNews Channel Africa (eNCA) reported Wednesday. Using the known alias Natalie Faye Webb, she rented at least three properties around Johannesberg (though it was unclear whether she ever lived there), ran up debts of $8,600, and used the fake passport to enter Kenya in 2011. Her alleged blog. Though unsubstantiated, reports in 2012 claimed Lewthwaite was behind a telling blog post (since removed from the Internet) called “Fears and Tears: Confessions of a Female Mujahid,” posted on the site of Muslim Youth Centre, a Kenyan ally of al-Shaabab. In it, the anonymous writer warned, “Fear can make you do many things,” and wrote, “My decision to revert [sic] to Islam is the most precious gift that my maker has bestowed upon me.” Related:10 Female Fugitives Wanted by the FBIWho Is Katherine Russell, Widow of Boston Marathon Bombing Suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev?

Kenya mall siege ‘over’ but death toll unclear
James Macharia and Duncan Miriri 23 hours ago
By James Macharia and Duncan Miriri

NAIROBI (Reuters) – As Kenya began three days of mourning on Wednesday for at least 67 people killed in the siege of a Nairobi mall, it was unclear how many more hostages may have died with the Somali Islamist attackers buried in the rubble.

Declaring final victory over the al Qaeda-linked gunmen from al Shabaab who stormed the Westgate shopping center on Saturday, President Uhuru Kenyatta said that three floors in a part of the mall had collapsed near the end of the operation, leaving an unknown number of bodies under steel and concrete.

It was not clear what caused the structure to come down.

Five militants had been shot dead, Kenyatta said, and six security personnel died in the four days of fighting.

Sixty-one civilians had so far been confirmed dead, Kenyatta added. Kenyan officials declined to say how many of 63 people whom the Red Cross had earlier classed as unaccounted for may also have died in a showdown with guerrillas, who had threatened to kill their hostages and go down fighting.

Eleven people suspected of involvement with the well-planned and executed assault were in custody, the Kenyan president added. But he did not say how many, if any, were gunmen taken alive and how many may have been people arrested elsewhere.

It was also unclear whether intelligence reports of American or British gunmen would be confirmed. Al Shabaab denied that any women took part, after British sources said the fugitive widow of one of the 2005 London suicide bombers might have some role.

The shattered mall, an imposing, Israeli-built symbol of a new prosperity for some in Africa while many remain mired in poverty, lay largely silent overnight, after days of gunfire, explosions and bloodshed.

“The operation is now over,” Kenyatta told Kenyans in a televised address. “We have ashamed and defeated our attackers.”

He announced three days of national mourning.

Bill Clinton reflects on foundation employee kille …Play video.”

BODIES IN RUBBLE

Police said the attackers, who devastated restaurants and shops at a busy Saturday lunchtime, spraying bullets and grenades at Kenyans and foreigners, were now either dead or in custody.

“Now it is for the forensic and criminal experts,” said a police spokesman, Masoud Mwinyi.

Some of the 63 people reported to the Red Cross as still missing may simply not have been at the mall, or may have later made it home without the agency being made aware. But some, at least, appear to have been held hostage.

“There are several bodies trapped in the rubble, including the terrorists,” Kenyatta said. At the weekend, he had said there were between 10 and 15 militants holed up in the mall.

Several foreigners of many nationalities have already been named among the dead. The mall was a favorite with expatriates.

It is unclear how many foreigners may still be missing.

Survivors of the assault told tales of horror and narrow escapes. Some made it out after hours, even days, of hiding in terror. The uncle of one British four-year-old told the Sun newspaper his nephew had told a militant “You’re a very bad man”, as the gunman let some children and their mother go.

Officials said the raiders had set a major fire on Monday in a supermarket. On Tuesday, a thin trail of smoke drifted into a soggy sky as darkness fell, the result, rescue volunteers said, of soldiers detonating locked doors in a search for militants.

Police let some people retrieve cars they left behind when shoppers fled in panic. Journalists and others were kept well away behind a security cordon.

FOREIGN FIGHTERS

Kenyan Foreign Minister: 2 or 3 Americans Involved …Play video.”

Kenyatta said he could not confirm intelligence reports of British and American militants, adding that forensic tests were being carried out to establish their nationalities. The government denied speculation that women were among the guerrillas, but said some had been dressed as women. That may have been a ploy to smuggle more weapons past mall guards.

It is unusual, if not unknown, for Islamist militants to use female fighters: “We have an adequate number of young men who are fully committed & we do not employ our sisters in such military operations #Westgate,” al Shabaab said on Twitter.

It also dismissed comments by a Kenyan minister that two or three of the militants were young Somali or Arab Americans.

A British security source said it was possible that Samantha Lewthwaite, widow of Germaine Lindsay one of the London suicide bombers of July 7 2005, was involved in the Nairobi siege in some way. “It is a possibility. But nothing definitive or conclusive yet,” the source said.

Lewthwaite is wanted in connection with an alleged plot to attack expensive hotels and restaurants in Kenya.

Making no mention of gunmen still in the mall, al Shabaab also drew a link to the most recent Islamist attack in London, when a soldier was stabbed to death on a busy street in May in the suburb of Woolwich. Michael Adebolajo and a fellow British Muslim convert of Nigerian descent face trial for murder.

“It’s an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth…’ Remember Mujahid Adebolajo? This is what he meant. His was #Woolwich, #Westgate ours!” read another al Shabaab Twitter post.

“These cowards will meet justice as will their accomplices and patrons, wherever they are,” said Kenyatta.

KENYATTA

He thanked other leaders, including U.S. President Barack Obama, for their support and used his address to praise the response of the Kenyan people and call for national unity, six months after his election was marked by ethnic tensions.

“Kenya has stared down evil and triumphed,” he said.

NYPD: More Police Around Shopping MallsPlay video.”

Many Kenyans agree that the bloodshed has helped foster a greater sense of national unity.

“We are all talking about it. The one good thing is that the whole of Kenya has become one, except for al Shabaab,” said Vipool Shah, who helped pull bodies out of the mall.

Kenyatta’s focus on Kenya’s troubles, and of his role in a global campaign against terrorism, was a reminder that he faces trial at The Hague in a few weeks time for crimes against humanity over violence that followed a 2007 election. The International Criminal Court adjourned the trial of his vice president this week because of the Westgate attack.

Kenyatta and his government have urged the ICC to drop the case and warm words for the Kenyan leadership from Western allies during the siege may have boosted their hopes that the court might be pressed to shelve proceedings in the interests of shoring up an important partner in the fight against al Qaeda.

The Nairobi attack came at a time when several violent Islamist groups from Mali to Algeria and Nigeria to Kenya have tapped into local grievances. But all have espoused an anti-Western, anti-Christian creed and are striking at state authority and international interests.

SHABAAB RESURGENT?

Regional intelligence experts believe the Nairobi raiders were members of a crack unit loyal to leader Ahmed Godane, who has been seeking to rebrand al Shabaab as a significant international jihadist group.

Al Shabaab had threatened revenge since Kenyan troops joined the war against Islamists in its chaotic northern neighbor two years ago. The group created funding, recruiting and training networks in Kenya. Kenyatta dismissed an al Shabaab demand to pull Kenyan troops from Somalia after the mall siege began.

The attack bears out Western concern that Somalia, a hotspot in the U.S.-led war on Islamist militants across the globe, may be a launchpad for strikes on regional countries even as African troops put them on the defensive in the Horn of Africa state.

Obama, whose father was Kenyan, said he believed the country – scene of one of al Qaeda’s first big attacks, in 1998, when a bomb devastated the U.S. embassy in Nairobi – would continue to be a regional pillar of stability.

Somalia’s prime minister appealed in Geneva for international support to combat al Shabaab, but said a military solution to their insurgency alone was not enough.

Abdi Farah Shirdon said: “We still have a difficult journey ahead of us. A military solution alone is not enough, promotion of rule of law, greater regional cooperation and economic stability and provision of public services are all key factors.”

(Reporting by James Macharia, Duncan Miriri and Matthew Mpoke Bigg and Pascal Fletcher in Nairobi.; Writing by Edmund Blair and James Macharia.; Editing by Alastair Macdonald and Christopher Wilson)
——-

Westgate attack: Kenyan authorities on the spot over slip-ups
Updated Wednesday, September 25th 2013 at 23:40 GMT +3

Armoured personnel carriers leave Westgate area after the end of operation against terrorists. [PHOTO: standard]

By JAMES MBAKA
KENYA: Apparent contradictions in official accounts of the four-day siege on the Westgate Mall have put authorities on the spot.

A classic example was who started the fire that caused plumes of thick black smoke that billowed from the building on Monday. Initially, authorities claimed security forces had done it as a tactic but they later blamed it on the attackers.

At some point, senior government officials and security operatives contradicted each other in the open and then made belated alterations under the guise of ‘official information’.

Convince Kenyans

As President Uhuru Kenyatta on Tuesday evening addressed the nation and declared that “ Al-Shabaab are defeated”, his statement appeared to attempt to convince Kenyans and the world at large that the fierce battle to reclaim the mall was over.

The president’s message was that 67 people, including six soldiers, had been killed as a result of the attack on Westgate. He noted that five attackers had also been killed and 11 of them captured. According to the earlier figures, the number of those arrested was 16.

However, the Interior minister had earlier in the day stated that security agents had arrested 10 suspects for interrogation in connection to the Westgate attack.

It became difficult to verify the truth of the statements being released after the military drove away journalists covering the attack.

Claims that security forces had rescued people on Monday and Tuesday morning could not be verified after the government failed to release the figures. The media, which had camped only 300m from the gate, did not see any hostage being rescued as the number of those held by attackers remained unclear.

On Sunday, the government had estimated the number of hostages to be 30, including children, but the media was not given the actual figures as the rescue mission purportedly continued.

Only ambulances and military pick-ups could be seen driving up to the entrance doors before speeding off, raising anxiety that they were ferrying dead bodies.

The military said three floors caved in but the cause has not been established.

While addressing the press accompanied by Inspector-General of Police David Kimaiyo and Chief of Staff Major General Julius Karangi, Interior Cabinet Secretary Joseph ole Lenku appeared to slip up on what appeared to be a rehearsed statement and suggested that the military was responsible for the fire before the two officers nudged him into recanting the statement, and blaming the fire on the terrorists.

President Kenyatta, who is also the Commander-in-Chief of the Kenya Defence Forces (KDF), announced on Tuesday evening that the siege was over, but added that the losses were “immense”.

But late on Monday, the Interior ministry on its Twitter handle had already declared the siege was over.

“We’re in control of Westgate,” read the tweet, about three-and-a-half days after Al-Shabaab militants stormed the mall.

State House spokesman Manoah Esipisu also said all hostages were believed to have been evacuated.

“Our special forces are inside the building checking the rooms. We think that everyone, the hostages, have been evacuated, but we do not want to take any chances,” he was quoted to have said.

“The hostages who were being held by the Mujahideen inside Westgate are still alive, looking quite disconcerted but, nevertheless, alive,” Al-Shabaab said in a message posted on its latest Twitter handle after an earlier one was pulled down.

Police tweet

Also on Tuesday morning, before the break of the stand-off, Kenyan police posted a message on Twitter saying they were diffusing explosives set up by the militants at the mall.

“We are doing a clean-up of explosives that had been set up by the terrorists,” Kenyan police said in a tweet.

“The Special Forces call this sanitising. At the moment, they have not met any resistance, but of course we are not ruling out the possibility that there are a couple of them hiding in a remote room or corner,” said Esipisu.

But fierce sporadic shooting erupted again on the same day – hours after officials had claimed the special forces were “in control” of the mall – and Al-Shabaab had also claimed to be still holding hostages.

As government authorities insisted it was in control, sporadic bursts could be heard again. Earlier on Tuesday, Al-Shabaab bragged in a Twitter message that their fighters were “still holding their ground”.

There were conflicting reports about the true identity of the attackers, six of whom are reported to have been killed by Kenyan special forces during the siege, and the number of those who were allegedly in custody.

No details have been given on the number of hostages freed, or those still being held, but 63 people were earlier recorded missing by the Kenya Red Cross. This figure was thought to include hostages as well as those possibly killed by their captors.

Another issue raised was the identity of the woman suspected to be the commander of the attackers. Witnesses said they saw a woman leading the militants, but the Interior minister said there was no woman even as the President acknowledged the presence of a woman.

On multiple occasions, Western security officials fear that several fighters slipped out of the mall during the mayhem of the attack, dropping their guns and disguising themselves as civilians, an account echoed by some witnesses.
———

Arrested Briton ‘not significant’ to Kenya attack probe
Updated Wednesday, September 25th 2013 at 18:01 GMT +3

A British national arrested in Nairobi is “not of significant interest” to the investigation into the mall siege that killed at least 72 people, Britain’s top diplomat in Kenya said on Wednesday.

The Foreign Office in London confirmed the comment by British High Commissioner Christian Turner, which had appeared on media websites, but provided no further details.

According to the Daily Mail newspaper, a 35-year-old Briton of Somali origin was arrested at Nairobi’s Jomo Kenyatta airport as he attempted to leave Kenya on a Turkish Airlines flight.

A Foreign Office spokesman declined to comment on the details contained in the report, saying only that the British authorities were aware of the arrest of a Briton in the Kenyan capital and stood ready to provide consular assistance.

A Kenyan anti-terrorism police unit source also said a British citizen of Somali origin was detained after missing his flight at Nairobi airport, and was now being questioned. He gave no more details.

The Daily Mail said the man had attracted attention at the airport because he had bruising to his face, was wearing dark glasses and was behaving suspiciously.

The newspaper quoted Kenyan officials as saying the man’s British passport appeared to be genuine and it contained a Kenyan visa, although there was no stamp indicating when and how he had entered the country.

The newspaper also said the man said under questioning that his facial injuries happened during a recent visit to Somalia.

Bomb disposal experts and investigators were searching through the wreckage of the Westgate shopping mall on Wednesday after a four-day confrontation with Islamist militants.

-REUTERS
——-

Mystery of 71 missing persons as Nairobi’s Westgate Mall siege ends
Updated Wednesday, September 25th 2013 at 23:40 GMT +3

How the attack happened

By NYAMBEGA GISESA
ngisesa@standardmedia.co.ke

NAIROBI; KENYA: Forensic investigators sifted through the rubble at the Westgate Mall as questions lingered about the fate of dozens reported missing at the end of the deadly four-day siege.

Authorities had indicated the terrorists had hostages inside the upscale shopping complex during the standoff, but authorities, curiously, appeared to avoid the matter or give inconclusive responses after prodding.

President Kenyatta on Tuesday night said three floors of the building had collapsed and “there were several bodies still trapped in the rubble including some terrorists.”

On Wednesday, Interior Cabinet Secretary Joseph Ole Lenku said although some bodies could still be trapped in the rubble, the number of the dead “is not expected to increase significantly.”

Officially, 67 people — 61 civilians and six security agents — were killed during the attack after gunmen struck the shopping complex on Saturday morning firing indiscriminately at shoppers and staff.

But the Kenya Red Cross Society (KRCS) reported a death toll of 69, and added 63 were recorded as missing. The Government has blamed the inconsistency on a possible “double count” by aid workers. However, the last update given by KRCS yesterday afternoon points out that “the number of persons reported to KRCS as missing has risen to 71.”

Other than being involved in forensics, according to the Times of Israel, the role of Israelis in the Westgate Mall situation has not been clear.

On Monday, Israeli defence officials confirmed a team was dispatched to Nairobi within hours of the hostage crisis, but said that armed fighting units were not part of the delegation.

On Wednesday morning, soldiers from Langata’s Maroon Commandos were among the last combat units to leave the mall after the final assault early Tuesday.

Other teams that took part in the operation were the Kenya Defence Forces’ 75 Artillery, 20 Para, 30 Special Forces and 40 Rangers Strike Force unit.

“We left behind a team of Israeli experts who came with small dogs with big ears to start carrying out forensic (investigation),” said a soldier involved in the final operation.

The terrorists are said to have stuffed most of the bodies in specific rooms that were close to the source of the fire and where part of the building caved in.

“It might take several days to retrieve some of the bodies that might have been trapped in the debris,” said another soldier.

On Tuesday after soldiers defeated the terrorists, one of the KDF soldiers described a “scene from a horror movie”.

“There was blood everywhere. Some bodies were burnt and others rotting,” he told The Standard. In some rooms, bodies were strewn on the floor, added the soldier, who declined to be named as he discussed the sensitive operation.

Yesterday, those who spoke to The Standard demanded a list of people killed or injured during the Westgate Mall siege. “Where can I go to find a complete list of Kenyans killed or injured at Westgate? I have a friend there that I have not heard from,” Ike Okafor enquired from The Standard last evening through e-mail.

Another mystery surrounds the terrorists – although officials estimated them at between 10 and 15, only five were reported killed after Special Forces stormed the building.

Explosion

There are questions as to the whereabouts of the rest, although authorities say 10 suspects are in custody.

By the time we went to press yesterday, a loud explosion was reported in Wajir town. However, The Standard could not immediately confirm what caused the explosion.

Earlier yesterday, forensic experts scoured the debris at Westgate Mall to identify bodies and secure vital evidence. Foreign teams from Israel, US, Canada, Germany and UK joined the operation.

Authorities said the priority was debris clearance to facilitate immediate recovery of bodies.

Interior Cabinet Secretary Joseph Ole Lenku said the process, which involves fingerprinting, DNA and ballistics examination, would go on for the next seven days.

Lenku gave an update of the situation flanked by the Chief of Defence Forces Gen Julius Karangi, Inspector-General David Kimaiyo, Defence Cabinet Secretary Raychelle Omamo and her Foreign Affairs counterpart Amina Mohamed, among others.

Authorities said they were yet to establish the identities of the terrorists. “We have also been asked about the presence of a woman among the terrorists. We cannot conclusively confirm the identity of any of the suspects until the forensic investigations have been concluded,” he added.

On Wednesday, President Uhuru Kenyatta chaired an emergency Cabinet meeting and another by the National Security Council.

Secretary to the Cabinet Francis Kimemia said the special NSAC meeting was “to push for a revitalised national and regional counter terrorism strategy and disaster management.”

Officials also fought off claims of intelligence failure, saying the Government had foiled several terror plots in the recent past.

“The Government has received many terror alerts over the last two years, and prevented them without the knowledge of Kenyans. This was unfortunate,” Interior PS Mutea Iringo tweeted Wednesday.

Today, the Director General of the National Intelligence Service Michael Gichangi is expected to appear before the National Assembly Committee on Defence and Foreign Relations where the Westgate crisis could feature.

ngisesa@standardmedia.co.ke
———

Kenya government defends National Intelligence Service over Westgate terror attack
Updated Wednesday, September 25th 2013 at 23:36 GMT +3

Marine workers to lose jobs in massive lay-off by State

Massive lay-off is looming at Mombasa based Kenya Marine and Fisheries Institution (KEMFRI) as the government moves to cutback wage bills in the country’s research institutions.

State defends NIS over Westgate terror attack Photo: STANDARD

By ALLY JAMAH

Nairobi,KENYA: The government has defended itself from accusations of intelligence failures that resulted in the horrific killings by the Al-Shabaab terrorists at Westgate Mall.

Interior Ministry Principal Secretary Mutea Iringo yesterday said the State intelligence agencies have prevented many terror attacks in the recent past noting that the Westgate killings are “unfortunate” since it was among the “few instances” in which the killers had outsmart government agencies.

“Over the last few years, since terrorism became a major threat to the country, we have been receiving information about possible terror incidents. We have pre-empted many of them behind the scenes without telling Kenyans. It is unfortunate that the Westgate attacks happened,” he said.

Iringo declined to confirm whether the government received any specific intelligence on the Westgate attack from Nairobi Senator Mike Sonko, who has claimed that he had forwarded the information to the National Intelligence Service ( NIS), which refused to act on it.

On Monday, President Uhuru Kenyatta also defended the intelligence-gathering agency against criticisms of failure saying they have successfully prevented attacks in the past and should be strengthened with more resources and skills to do a better job.

A July 19, twitter posting by the Al-Shabaab group seemed to suggest that the group was planning a massive attack on Kenyan targets. The posting, on the harsh tag @HSMPress Office read: “A spectacular Al-Shabaab attack with fifty plus deaths and guaranteed extended media coverage is finalised. #Kenya or #Somali? Godane ponders.”

“Godane” refers to Al-Shabaab leader Ahmed AbdiGodane, also known as Mukhtar Abu Zubair,

Criticisms have been mounting against NSIS’s capacity to collect valuable information that would prevent possible terror attacks with Members of Parliament calling for reforms in the intelligence agency to boost its capacity to protect Kenyans.

The lawmakers expressed outrage at the security lapse that allowed the terrorists, among them foreigners, into the country smuggling in arms and holding the military in a standoff for four days.

Kenya: INTERPOL team deployed to assist Kenyan investigation into Westgate shopping centre terror attack

From: News Release – African Press Organization (APO)
PRESS RELEASE

INTERPOL’s role is to help coordinate the international response in support of the Kenyan authorities

NAIROBI, Kenya, September 26, 2013/ — An INTERPOL Incident Response Team (IRT) (http://www.interpol.int) has been deployed at the request of Kenyan authorities to provide on-site assistance to the Westgate shopping centre terror attack investigation.

Logo: http://www.photos.apo-opa.com/plog-content/images/apo/logos/interpol.jpg

Headed by INTERPOL’s Executive Director of Police Services Jean-Michel Louboutin the team includes Disaster Victim Identification (DVI) and data specialists who will carry out real-time comparisons against INTERPOL’s global databases on DNA and fingerprints and other evidence gathered from the crime scene.

The IRT, which arrived in Nairobi on Wednesday, will also ensure the swift dissemination of all forensic information, photographs of the suspected terrorists, details of arrested individuals and any other suspects linked to the deadly assault, to INTERPOL’s 190 member country network for comparison against national databases to identify any potential leads.

“INTERPOL’s role is to help coordinate the international response in support of the Kenyan authorities as they investigate this horrific incident, and to assist their actions at the regional and international levels,” said Mr Louboutin.

“Whether it be through comparison of information against INTERPOL’s global databases, or the issuance of a notice to identify a victim, locate a wanted person, or seek additional information about suspects, we will offer all necessary assistance to help bring those responsible to justice,” added Mr Louboutin.

In addition to the IRT deployment, support is also being provided to Kenya’s national authorities via INTERPOL’s Regional Bureau in Nairobi and the 24-hour Command and Coordination Centre (CCC) at its General Secretariat headquarters in Lyon, France.

The CCC will also act as a central liaison to the INTERPOL National Central Bureaus of all the involved countries to ensure any ante mortem data on those killed during the attack, both victims and suspected perpetrators, is received as quickly as possible by Kenyan authorities.

INTERPOL also stands ready to mobilize additional support from its global network of DVI and other experts, with officers from its Counter-terrorism and Criminal Analysis Units examining all INTERPOL databases to determine whether any links can be drawn between this terrorist act and other incidents around the world.

Distributed by the African Press Organization.

SOURCE
INTERPOL

Kenya: Security organs knew of attack in advance, claims Nairobi Senator Mike Sonko

Evans MACHERA
Date: Wed, Sep 25, 2013 at 12:45 AM
Subject: Security organs knew of attack in advance, claims Nairobi Senator Mike Sonko

Judy,

The Government is responsible for the security of the Nation. Nafikiri hawa maharamia bado wako and our security forces must be on their toes.

Politicians must be always politicians, but blames at this stage can only divert our attention to anger and give room to the enemy to strike again.

We have a parliamentary committee on security which Sonko etc should convene meetings with and address the issue. Public address will only worsen. Certainly, President Uhuru and the National Security Advisory Committee must burn midnight oil to have our security network take charge.

Its not over until its over.

Peace,love and unity for our country.

Evans MACHERA

– – – – – – – – – – –

From: Judy Miriga
Sent: Wednesday, September 25, 2013 4:10 AM
Subject: Security organs knew of attack in advance, claims Nairobi Senator Mike Sonko

Good People!

If the Security organs knew of attack in advance and did nothing about it, then something is seriously wrong and the government must explain to the people what this is so.

Judy Miriga Diaspora Spokesperson Executive Director Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc., USA http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com/

Security organs knew of attack in advance, claims Nairobi Senator Mike Sonko
Updated Tuesday, September 24th 2013 at 22:19 GMT +3
By MOSES NJAGIH

NAIROBI; KENYA : Nairobi Senator Mike Sonko sensationally told the Senate that security organs and intelligence officers were aware of an impending attack on key areas in Nairobi, including the Westgate Mall.

Sonko claimed that he had helped two women of either Asian or Arabic origin to offer information to police on Al-Shabaab militiamen who were targeting sections of Nairobi. He gave the revelations as the Senate took time off its business to discuss the terror attack on the mall.

He said the women had approached him three months ago with information to the effect that the gang, which had rented a house in Parklands and Westlands, were planning a major attack.

“They mentioned Westgate Mall, Village Market, Parliament and the Kenyatta International Conference Centre as their targets,” claimed Sonko.

The Motion was moved by Leader of Majority Kithure Kindiki, who termed the attack a national disaster.

Attacking members of the National Intelligence Service (NIS), Sonko told the House that after getting the information from the two women, he assisted them to record their statements with the police and the intelligence officers for further investigations.

Shock many

He said the two women were initially living with the gang in the rented houses but had escaped after being showed the items that the suspects were preparing for the attack.

Though the Senator declined to give the exact details that the two women gave the police, he said that he was ready to record a statement to that effect.

“I know I will shock many people here. These people have remained in this area planning the attack for about three months and despite the investigators getting that information they could not quell the attack,” said Sonko.

The senators faulted the country’s intelligence services even as they hailed the security organs over the manner in which they had handled the attack.

“Instead of the intelligence officers keeping busy tapping our mobile phones, NIS should be employing that vigour towards arresting crime,” said Minority Deputy Whip Janet Ong’era.

Baringo Senator Gideon Moi hailed Kenyans over their strong spirit during the tragedy.

Kenya Defence Forces give horrific accounts, death toll may go up
Updated Tuesday, September 24th 2013 at 23:39 GMT +3
GLANCE FACTS

Intelligence reports had suggested that a British woman and two or three American citizens may have been involved in the attack… We cannot confirm the details at present
By Nyambega Gisesa and Cyrus Ombati

KENYA: Soldiers who took part in the assault on terrorists at the Westgate Mall Tuesday gave a glimpse of the extent of the horrific attack at the upmarket shopping centre, fuelling fears the death toll would rise significantly.

The Kenya Defence Forces (KDF) troops interviewed described the situation inside the building as a “scene from a horror movie.”

“There was blood everywhere. Some bodies were burnt and others rotting,” a soldier told The Standard Tuesday. “The Nakumatt supermarket floor had blood splattered everywhere.”

In some rooms, bodies were strewn on the floor, added the soldier, who declined to be named as he discussed the sensitive operation.

The casualties

President Uhuru Kenyatta said the confrontation with terrorists left 240 casualties.

The President said 67 people, including six security officers, had been killed and 61 were still in hospital following the Saturday morning attack by the terrorists estimated at between 10 and 15.

Red Cross reported 69 had died and the fate of 63 listed missing unclear.

In a televised address from State House, Nairobi, last night, President Kenyatta said: “Towards the tail end of the operation three floors of the Westgate Mall collapsed and there are several bodies still trapped in the rubble including the terrorists.”

The President said five terrorists had been killed and 11 suspects were in custody. “Intelligence reports had suggested that a British woman and two or three American citizens may have been involved in the attack… We cannot confirm the details at present… Forensic experts are working to ascertain the nationalities of the terrorists…,” he said.

“These cowards will meet justice, as will their accomplices and patrons, wherever they are,” declared President Kenyatta, vowing Kenya would not relent in the war against terrorism.

“It has not been an easy time for anyone of us, least of all the affected; Our losses are immense,” the President said as he declared three days of national mourning beginning today, to honour those who lost their lives in the attack. Official flags will fly at half-mast throughout the country during this period.

The Head of State said the agents of terror “had the agenda of perpetrating grievous mayhem in our country, senselessly killing, maiming and traumatising harmless, innocent people…”

“We confronted this evil without flinching, contained our deep grief and pain, and conquered it… As a nation, our head is bloodied, but unbowed… The criminals found us unafraid, as we ever shall be…We cannot be conquered,” President Kenyatta declared.

On Tuesday, The Standard learnt tens of bodies were removed from the building at about 6pm after Special Forces secured it. Several hearses ambulances and were stationed outside the mall.

Another security officer said the mall had been turned into ‘an abattoir’ within half an hour as gunmen went on the rampage. Mortuary attendants from the City Mortuary were called in to the scene. Officials said some of the bodies were badly damaged and needed proper dressing before being moved to the mortuary.

Earlier, security forces had launched the final assault shortly before 6am Tuesday. For hours, bursts of gunfire and explosions were heard coming from the battle weary building.

Roof caved in

A section of the roof caved in and photographs emerged of burnt shells of vehicles in the parking that perhaps explained the plume of black smoke that billowed into the skies on Monday.

Authorities confirmed the terrorists had rigged the four-storied building with booby-traps and security forces had to sweep the building, explaining delays in the operation.

“We are doing a clean-up of explosives that had been set up by the terrorists,” the Kenya Police posted on its Twitter account.

Officials also confirmed three KDF soldiers had succumbed to their injuries sustained during the assault against the terrorists. Eight injured soldiers are admitted at the Defence Forces Memorial Hospital.

The fallen soldiers include Jacktone Puodi, 27, who had graduated in 2009 from Moi Barracks, Nairobi.

Puodi responded to the call to duty, and put himself in harms way, to help free terrified hostages, who could have included children like his one-year-old girl.

The gallant soldier himself an orphan, his parents died in 1996, put his life on the line to ensure that innocent civilians were not killed and children robbed of their parents.

Meanwhile, a British national is among seven men who were detained at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport ( JKIA).

The British government confirmed Abdulrazak Sharif Ahmed, 35, is their citizen.

The suspect reportedly had injuries on his body and face when he arrived at JKIA on Monday morning ready to fly out to Turkey.

Police say a dozen people have been arrested for questioning.

At the City mortuary, bodies of those killed in the attack were laid out on metal blocks, victims from all walks of life, lying side-by-side as a deathly stench filled the air.

For many families, the anguished search for loved ones, missing since the siege began Saturday morning, crudely ended here.

Agnes Mutua shed tears as she identified her nephew, whose body she found lying on the cold surface.

Various hospitals

Agnes and her sister, Mary Mureithi, had looked for him at various hospitals hoping to find him alive.

Other families were however lucky. Sundeep Sanbi’s daughter and wife narrowly escaped with their lives.

Sanbi recounted how he rushed from work to the mall on Saturday on hearing news of the attack. He talked to his wife on phone, as she cowered with her daughter inside one of the shops at the building as the attackers shot indiscriminately.

She was rescued at around 3pm on Saturday, alongside a couple of other people under heavy gunfire.

MUSLIM LEADERS SHOULD COME CLEAR ON AL SHABAAB OPPERATIONS

From: Ouko joachim omolo
The News Dispatch with Omolo Beste
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2013

The fact that British woman terrorist suspect, Samantha Lewthwaite who is believed to have been among the terrorists killed at the Westgate was a close supporter of Sheikh Aboud Rogo Mohammed before his death, it indicates that the war against Al-Shabaab is a long way to contain.

Muslim leaders in Mombasa still supported Rogo even when they knew very well that he faced charges of membership in al-Shabab, the Somali rebel group that is linked to al-Qaida and which has been outlawed in Kenya.

Rogo was not only supported by Muslim leaders at the Coast, including Muslim human rights activists, they also mobilized young rioters to clash with police who were trying to stop them from attacking Christian churches, throwing stones, damaging cars, and attacking businesses.

Burning of Christian churches implied that jihad war had been targeted on none Muslims, also known as kuffar (unbelievers). In response to the murder, al-Shabaab called on Kenyan Muslims to “take all necessary measures” to defend their religion.

Al-Shabaab wants Muslims in Kenya to take the matter into their own hands, stand united against the kuffar and take all necessary measures to protect their religion, their honour, their property and their lives from the enemies of Islam.

Lewthwaite is the widow of Jermaine Lindsay, one of the suicide bombers who killed 52 commuters in multiple bombings of London’s transport system on July 7, 2005.

The other is Briton Jermaine Grant who was also a great supporter of Rogo. He was sentenced to three years in prison for immigration offenses and lying to a government official about his identity.

Al-Shabab has vowed to carry out a large-scale attack in Nairobi in retaliation for Kenya sending troops into Somalia to fight the Islamist insurgents. Rogo is the fifth alleged Muslim extremist who has been killed according to human rights campaigners.

Lewthwaite is believed to have arrived in Mombasa in August 1, 2013 among other reasons to plan terrorist attacks in Kenya to coincide with the one-year anniversary of the assassination of Rogo.

Kenyan security officials placed citizens on alert, saying the Somali militant group could be targeting Mombasa, the coastal city where the cleric preached and where he was killed in a drive-by shooting on August 27, 2012.

The plan failed after the authorities raised the security level after receiving intelligence reports that at least five al-Shabaab fighters had crossed into Kenya from Somalia, Coast region.

Rogo was on a United Nations Security Council sanctions list because of alleged ties to both al-Shabaab and Kenya’s al-Hijra group — also known as the Muslim Youth Centre (MYC).

Since his killing, taped recording of his various speeches, sermons and lectures are being sold in Mombasa and Nairobi markets. The tapes appear to be amateur recordings from audience members.

In one such tape from a speech delivered in Nyeri district in Central Province on April 12th, Rogo said Somalia is the seedbed of jihad in Africa and Asia, and proclaimed that Islam would prevail in Somalia and the entire continent. He also called on Muslims to take up arms and join those who are allegedly fighting for Islam in foreign countries.

Lewthwaite, 29, a Muslim convert was wanted in Kenya on terror charges. She has been labelled the “white widow” because of her marriage to Lindsay, who blew up an Underground train at King’s Cross in 2005, killing 26 people. She has been on the run in East Africa for two years after allegedly plotting to attack Western targets in Kenya.

Fr Joachim Omolo Ouko, AJ
Tel +254 7350 14559/+254 722 623 578
E-mail omolo.ouko@gmail.com
Facebook-omolo beste
Twitter-@8000accomole

Real change must come from ordinary people who refuse to be taken hostage by the weapons of politicians in the face of inequality, racism and oppression, but march together towards a clear and unambiguous goal.

-Anne Montgomery, RSCJ UN Disarmament Conference, 2002

Press Statement by Muslim Leaders on the heinous attack at WestgateMall, Westlands Nairobi:

From: Abu Ayman

Sunday, Sept. 22. 2013

We Muslim leaders gathered here today condemn in the strongest terms the attack on peace loving Kenyans and our international guests who have chosen to live and work in Kenya.

We send our deepest condolences to the families of the bereaved and those wounded in the ongoing siege at the Westgate Mall.

We reiterate that wanton and indiscriminate killing of innocent men, women and children is against Islamic teachings and tenets.

We re-affirm our support to the government of Kenya and its security organs in the ongoing operations to secure the mall from the attackers.

We call upon our Muslim brethren and all Kenyans of goodwill to heed the appeal and come out in large numbers to donate blood to relieve our healthcare institutions provided care and treatment to the wounded.

We call upon all Kenyans to remain calm and refrain from being divided on sectarian grounds by this unfortunate incident.

Read by Adan Wachu, Secretary-General, Supreme Council of Kenya Muslims (SUPKEM)on behalf of the leaders gathered at Jamia Mosque Nairobi on Sunday 22.9.2013

Supreme Council of Kenya Muslims (SUPKEM)
Jamia Mosque Committee
National Muslim Leaders Forum
Majlis Ulamaa Kenya (National Council of Muslim Scholars)
Kenya Council of Imams and Ulamaa (KCIU)
Muslim Human Right Forum (MHRF)