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Said Saggar Ahmed Said Saggar Ahmed al-Qaeda Africa: Subsaharan Kenyan In Jug 20031129  
    charged with conspiracy related to the November 2002 car bomb attack that killed 15 people, including three Israeli tourists. They are also charged in connection with a near-simultaneous, but failed, attempt to shoot down an Israeli aircraft taking off from an airport in nearby Mombasa.
  Said Saggar Ahmed al-Qaeda in Africa Africa: East 20030808  

Africa: Subsaharan
Mombasa bombing suspects cleared
2005-06-27
A Kenyan judge has acquitted three men accused of conspiracy in the case of the 2002 suicide bombing of an Israeli-owned hotel in Mombasa. Nairobi Chief Magistrate Aggrey Muchelule said prosecutors had failed to connect the men to the bombing. Fifteen people, including three Israeli tourists, died in the attack on the Paradise Hotel.
I'm not sure a Kenyan court could find a connection between the deaders and the attack...
Charges against four other Kenyan suspects in the bombing were thrown out of court earlier this month. The three suspects - Kubwa Mohammed Seif, Said Saggar Ahmed and Mohammed Khamis - were also accused of plotting a failed rocket attack on an Israeli airliner that took off from Mombasa airport on the same day. The attacks were widely blamed on al-Qaeda. No-one has been convicted in connection with the bombing so far, and no-one else is due to stand trial.
And at this point it doesn't look like anybody will be...
When the trial first opened in January last year, the prosecution described the three men as "sworn suicide bombers". Mr Seif's lawyer, Kirathe Wandugi, told the Associated Press news agency that his client was extremely happy with the magistrate's decision.
"Oh? They're not gonna hang me? Why, that makes me extremely happy!"
"Our clients have been exonerated and the course of justice has been met. It's been a very long trial. These people have suffered," Mr Wandugi said. Critics have said the men should never have been charged in the first place and that the evidence presented was at best circumstantial.
"Go, and bomb no more!"
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Africa: Subsaharan
Kenya's Terror Conspiracy Trial Ends
2005-06-04
A judge began deliberating Friday on the fate of three Kenyans accused of conspiracy to bomb an Israeli-owned hotel and of attempts to shoot down an Israeli airliner north of the Indian Ocean port of Mombasa. Prosecutors have pressed for the maximum penalty of three years in jail, but defense lawyers say the accused should be found innocent because authorities failed to prove they were involved in planning the attacks. As the trial ended Friday, Nairobi Chief Magistrate Aggrey Muchelule said he will deliver judgment on June 21.

The suspects — Kubwa Mohammed Seif, Said Saggar Ahmed and Salmin Mohammed Khamis — are charged with conspiracy related to the November 2002 car bomb attack that killed 15 people, including three Israeli tourists. They are also charged in connection with a near-simultaneous, but failed, attempt to shoot down an Israeli aircraft taking off from an airport in nearby Mombasa.
And they're up for a maximum of three years?
It's positively ... European.
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Africa: East
Judge frees 2 bombing suspects
2003-11-29
A Kenyan high court judge on Friday ordered the release of two suspects charged with murder over last November’s bombing of an Israeli-owned hotel in Mombasa, a year to the day after the attack which killed 18 people. Justice Kaplana Rawal ordered the release of Faiz Abdalla Shariff and Mohamed Ali Hassan, two of nine suspects in the bombing who appeared in court on Friday, after the state prosecutor withdrew charges against them. "The proceedings of the hearings of this case have been terminated and the accused persons are free to go," Rawal said. "The attorney general has ruled that, after evaluating the evidence in totality and taking into account the fact that investigating terrorism takes a long time, and in view of the faceless nature of the people involved, it has been found necessary that the charges against the accused persons be withdrawn," Prosecutor John Gacivih said.
That means something, no doubt, even though it doesn't appear to make any sense...
On Friday, the state also reduced charges from murder to conspiracy to commit a felony against three others accused in the bombing: Mohammed Kubwa Seif, Said Saggar Ahmed and Salmin Mohamed Khamisi. "This is being done strictly in view of the evidence available. The three, whose charges (of murder) have been withdrawn, will be charged with conspiracy to commit a felony in a lower court," Gacivih said.
Keep working on it. Maybe you can get them for jaywalking or spitting in public...
Four others, Omar Said Omar, Mohamed Kubwa, Aboud Rogo Mohammed and Mohamed Ali Saleh Nabhan, were charged afresh on 15 counts of murder over the suicide bombing of the Mombasa Paradise hotel on November 28 last year. The four pleaded not guilty and Rawal set the dates of their hearing "from January 26, day to day, to February 26."
Wonder what the charges will be reduced to then...
Twelve Kenyans, three Israelis and three presumed bombers died in the attack on the hotel, carried out almost simultaneously with a failed missile attack on a charter jet carrying Israeli tourists shortly after take-off from Mombasa airport. Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda network has claimed responsibility for both attacks. About 250 people, victims and relatives, gathered outside the Mombasa hotel, weeping, wailing and praying as they marked the one-year anniversary of the tragedy. Among the mourners was receptionist Mercy Mwagambo, was on duty last November 28, when a car laden with explosives slammed into the hotel lobby. "I had many injuries and my right leg had first to be amputated before being sewn back at hospital after the bombing," Mwagambo, 25, said, supporting herself on crutches. Mwagambo lamented that her injury had completely ruined her family, as she was the sole breadwinner. She was only recently discharged from hospital and is still awaiting compensation, she said.
Just a civilian. She doesn't count. She's not even Muslim. Become a Muslim and the Soddies will probably throw some compensation your way, assuming you can come up with a male guardian...
The Mombasa attacks highlighted the enormous security challenges faced by Kenya, which has long, remote and highly porous borders with Somalia, Sudan, Ethiopia, Tanzania and Uganda, but has limited financial and human resources to patrol them. Somalia has been without a central government since 1991, when dictator Mohamed Siad Barre was ousted and the country fell into a cycle of clan warfare and lawlessness. The United Nations has said in a report published early this month that Somalia served as a rear base for extremists who planned and carried out the Mombasa bombing, and that the missiles fired at the jet were smuggled into Kenya by sea from Somalia in August last year, three months before the attacks.
I used to know some Rangers who were hoping for an opportunity to go back and visit Mogadishu...
Businessman Said Omar - one of the four accused who will go on trial in January on murder charges - has been accused of helping other suspects flee to neighbouring Somalia following the attack. Kenyan police are still hunting for Ali Saleh Nabhan - a brother of one of the suspects who will go on trial in January - suspected of having bought the car used in the suicide attack on the Paradise Hotel, and of allowing the bomb used in the explosion to be built up in his apartment. They are also hunting Comoran national Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, already on a wanted list in the United States for his alleged involvement in twin attacks on the US embassies in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, in 1998, in which 224 people died.
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Africa: East
Suspects in Kenya hotel attack to be tried before higher court
2003-08-08
Five suspects detained over the bombing of an Israeli-owned Mombasa hotel were remanded in custody after their charges were dropped by a lower court but then filed anew before a High Court judge. The suspects, who pleaded not guilty to 15 counts of murder, were charged before High Court Judge Tom Mbaluto soon after a magistrate in a lower court ordered their release following the prosecutor's decision to drop the earlier charges.
"Well, they said they were innocent, so I let them go..."
The judge said the trial was to take place in an open court where members of the public can listen to the proceedings. The accused were arrested in connection with the car bombing that killed 12 Kenyans and three Israelis at the Israeli-owned Paradise Hotel in Mombasa, on Kenya's Indian Ocean coast, on November 28 last year. Three bombers are presumed to have died in the attack, which together with a near-miss missile attack on a jet carrying Israeli tourists, was claimed by al-Qaeda. Last month, in a change in procedural rules, jurisdiction over murder cases was removed from the magistrates' courts, and they can be tried only before High Court judges.
Oh, inconvenient, that...
The magistrate's decision to order the freeing of the suspects earlier was apparently only a technical move designed to pave the way for charging and subsequently trying the accused in the High Court. The suspects were brought to court early in the morning amid tight security. Armed police and prison wardens stood guard in the court corridors as the accused were charged. Mbaluto ordered that the suspects be produced in court again on September 18 "with a view to fixing a date of hearing". Four of the accused — Salmin Mohamed Khamisi, father and son Mohamed Kubwa and Mohamed Kubwa Seif, Said Saggar Ahmed and Aboud Rogo Mohamed — were initially charged on June 24. The fifth man, Salmin Mohamed Khamisi, was charged on July 8. The suspects were all picked up from Kenya's Indian Ocean costal region. "This is not what we can call a normal murder case," said prosecutor John Gacivih. "It is a matter that needs technical reports," he added, suggesting that the trial could take a long time. One of the defence lawyers Maobe Mao urged the prosecution to expedite the preparation and presentation before the court of witness statements and other exhibits.
"Let's get this thing under way before you have time to put together an air-tight case..."
Link


East/Subsaharan Africa
Four charged over Kenya bombing
2003-06-24
A Kenyan court today charged four men with 13 counts of murder in connection with a terrorist attack that killed at least 10 Kenyans and three Israeli tourists. The suspects showed no emotion as the charges and names of the Kenyans and Israelis who were killed in the attack, on Mombasa airport on November 28 last year, were read out. The four Kenyans charged - Said Saggar Ahmed, Aboud Rogo Mohammed, Kubwa Mohamed and his son Mohamed Kubwa - were not asked to enter a plea because some prosecution documents were not prepared. In the November attack, assailants attempted to shoot down a chartered Israeli jet with shoulder-fired missiles as it was taking off from the airport at Mombasa. The missiles narrowly missed their intended target. Within a few minutes, suicide bombers blew up a car packed with explosives outside a beachfront hotel popular with Israelis. Ten Kenyans and three Israelis were killed along with as the bombers. At least three of the four suspects are allegedly connected to a man suspected of being Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, an alleged al-Qaida operative and prime suspect in the November attack, as well as the 1998 bombing of the US embassy in Nairobi. Both attacks have been blamed on al-Qaeda. Aboud Rogo Mohammed, an Islamic teacher, Kubwa Mohamed, a trader, and Mohamed Kubwa, a town councillor, were earlier this year charged with harbouring an illegal alien, known as Abdul Karim, who was thought to be Fazul Abdullah Mohammed.
An Islamic teacher?? Say it ain't so, Mo
Yes. He teaches explosives handling. He's very holy...
New evidence uncovered by the investigation led them to be charged with murder. The fourth suspect, Mr Ahmed, was first held by police last month, and was also charged with harbouring an illegal alien, said the suspects' lawyer, Maobe Mao. Mr Mao was unable to identify the illegal alien, but said that it was not Abdul Karim. Mr Ahmed was then released on bail, but was held by police again in Mombasa yesterday, in connection with the murder charges. In March, Mohamed Kubwa told the Associated Press that Aboud Rogo Mohammed had introduced his family to the man known as Abdul Karim early last year, and took him to the family home in Siyu, a town on Pate island near Somalia. Abdul Karim married Mohamed Kubwa's half-sister, Amina, and taught at an Islamic school in Siyu before disappearing earlier this year, Mr Kubwa said.
A family affair, how unusual
Investigators have told the Associated Press that both Mohamed Kubwa and Amina identified Abdul Karim as Fazul Abdullah Mohamed, a native of the Indian Ocean island nation of Comoros, who also has Kenyan citizenship. Abdul Karim's whereabouts are not know, but last month Kenyan authorities said they believed that Fazul Abdullah Mohammed - listed on the FBI's most wanted list - may have returned to Kenya from Somalia. The four men were charged amid renewed warnings of a terrorist attack in the East African nation, and pressure from US officials on Kenyan authorities to hunt down terrorists suspects. Somalia, a Muslim nation that has not had an effective government since its last president was ousted in 1991, is believed to be a transit point and staging ground for al-Qaida operatives working in eastern Africa. A US district court indicted Fazul Abdullah Mohammed in the 1998 US embassy bombings in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
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