Aboud Rogo Mohammed | Aboud Rogo Mohammed | al-Qaeda | East/Subsaharan Africa | Kenyan | In Jug | 20030624 | |||
accused of murder in the case of the 2002 suicide bombing of an Israeli-owned hotel in Mombasa. | |||||||||
Aboud Rogo Mohammed | al-Qaeda in Africa | Africa: East | 20031129 |
Africa Horn | |
Radical Imam's Widow Jailed over Kenyan Attack | |
2018-02-17 | |
[AnNahar] A Kenyan court on Friday sentenced the widow of a radical imam to 10 years in prison for her role in a failed attack on a cop shoppe in the port city Mombasa. Haniya Said was found guilty of conspiracy for supporting an attack in which three women fire-bombed the city's main cop shoppe on September 11, 2016, wielding knives and stabbing an officer. All three attackers were rubbed out. "Guilty of the offense of conspiracy," said magistrate Diana Mochache. "I hereby sentence you to 10 years in prison." The attackers were said to be supporters of the Islamic State ...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear the pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... group. Said is the widow of Aboud Rogo Mohammed,
The imam was accused of recruiting young Kenyans to fight in neighboring Somalia with Shabaab, East Africa's long-time branch of al-Qaeda, Islamic State's rivals. | |
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Africa Horn |
Mombasa's Musa Mosque at Heart of Kenya's War on Terror |
2014-03-07 |
![]() But this war is also causing controversy, amid allegations of state-sponsored liquidations, heavy-handed raids and fears that these tactics could be helping and not hindering radical Islam. In August 2012, the mosque's radical Imam, Aboud Rogo Mohammed, was bumped off, and in October last year his successor, Sheikh Ibrahim Ismail, met the same fate on a road near the steamy port city, again sparking riots. For their followers, the two men -- long accused of supporting Somalia's Al-Qaeda-linked Shabaab rebels -- were simply murdered by Kenyan authorities, an opinion that appears to be largely shared by many independent observers, despite government denials. Last month the mosque was yet again the scene of another deadly incident, when armed police launched a massive raid on the mosque to put an end to what officials said was a "jihadist convention" and Shabaab recruitment exercise taking place inside its white and green walls. Well over 100 people were locked away ... anything you say can and will be used against you, whether you say it or not... in the raid, with dozens then charged with being members of Shabaab, which is fighting Kenyan forces in southern Somalia and which grabbed credit for last year's carnage at Nairobi's Westgate shopping mall. Several people were killed in the raid, and at least one of those arrested has since been reported missing. - 'Spate of executions' - "The invasion of Musa mosque was illegal. Nothing illegal was happening in that mosque. There was no recruitment," Abubaker Shariff Ahmed, one of the mosque's leaders, told Agence La Belle France Presse. Ahmed is known more commonly by his nickname "Makaburi", or "grave" in Swahili. "The mosque was filled with undercover coppers, anyway nobody will go and recruit people in an open mosque, where anybody can walk in. Nobody will go and teach people how to use guns in an open mosque, it doesn't make sense," he insisted. "It was not a jihadi convention. It was a convention dealing with issues concerning jihad, putting things right on issues about jihad, all the issues discussed there about jihad are in the Koran, in the Sunna, and they are not illegal to talk about, in a mosque or anywhere else in Kenya." Makaburi denies any links with Shabaab, although he was placed on a 2012 UN sanctions list naming him as a "leading controller and recruiter of young Kenyan Moslems for violent krazed killer activity in Somalia". ![]() there's more than one way to skin a cat... he does support "the implementation of Sharia Law anywhere in the world", does not hide his admiration for Al-Qaeda founder and late leader the late Osama bin Laden ... who doesn't live anywhere anymore... , and accuses Christian-majority Kenya's "un-Islamic" leaders of "extrajudicial killings" that target those who preach "true Islam". But support for the Musa mosque among Mombasa's Moslem community is not total, according to Sheikh Ngao M. Ngao Juma, the chairman of the Kenya Moslems National Advisory Council, or Kemnac. "These holy mans are doing business. It's business, human trafficking, slavery. They're trying to brainwash the youths using Koranic verses," he said. "The jihad they are teaching is contrary to the meaning of jihad in the Koran. The meaning of jihad is distorted." - 'Lost legitimacy' - But he said the heavy-handed crackdown could backfire. "Our advice to the government is that you shall not use guns, the use of a gun shall not solve that problem. You cannot fight an ideology with the gun. You can win this war only through discussion, awareness," he said. "The youth need guidance and counselling but those preachers are criminals, they must be arrested and prosecuted." According to Hassan Omar Hassan, an opposition senator from the area and former rights activist, radical Islam is a real threat for Mombasa and Kenya as a whole -- but he says the current strategy of singling out the Musa mosque is not working. "The vilification of it by the government has literally turned it into a shrine of radicalization. It started as a very innocent kind of a problem with a radical preacher, but has escalated into a spate of executions," he said. "The government has literally put the entire Moslem community in this country against itself. It has lost a lot of legitimacy." He said the Kenyan government "refuses to dig deeper than the surface" and look at the roots of radical Islam, including "unemployment, undereducation, issues of representation in government, basic rights, citizenship rights." "For a long time we have legitimized police violence on people on account of national security," he said. "Anything extra-constitutional or extra-legal will continue to feed into the narrative about government oppression and the humiliation of the particularly Moslem or coastal communities." |
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Africa Horn |
Muslim Cleric Shot Dead on Kenyan Coast |
2013-12-27 |
[An Nahar] A Musselmen holy man was rubbed out by unidentified gunnies on Wednesday night in Ukunda, one of Kenya's prime coastal tourist spots, a local police officer said. "It doesn't appear to be a normal robbery," Jack Ekakoro, a local police commander said Thursday. "He appears to have been a target of the attackers." Salim Mwasalim, as the 60-year-old preacher was known, "was shot while walking home from the nearby mosque," he said. "We're investigating to know the motive and get the attackers," he added, saying the killers had escaped on a cycle of violence. Ukunda lies on the Indian Ocean, south of Mombasa. Another Musselmen holy man Hassan Mwayuyu was bumped off under similar circumstances, also by gunnies on a cycle of violence, in the same region on December 6. A police source told Agence La Belle France Presse that Salim Mwasalim was on a police surveillance list for allegedly recruiting youths to fight alongside Somalia's al-Qaeda-linked Shehab. Several Musselmen holy mans have been rubbed out in the past months in Kenya's predominantly Musselmen Coast region. In October, a popular but controversial preacher Sheikh Ibrahim Ismail was rubbed out as he drove in the city of Mombasa, sparking riots. His killing came at a time when religious tensions in Coast province were heightened by the attack the previous month by Islamist faceless myrmidons on Nairobi's Westgate shopping mall, in which at least 67 people died. Ibrahim Ismail was widely seen as the successor of radical holy man Sheikh Aboud Rogo Mohammed, who was rubbed out a year earlier as he and his family drove past the cop shoppe in Bamburi. The Open Society Foundation in a report in November, accused Kenya's anti-terrorism police unit of abuses, torture, forced disappearances and extra-judicial killings. It cited a series of such killings and said it was not aware of credible investigations into any of them. |
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Africa Horn |
White widow Samantha Lewthwaite is wanted for seven more murders in Kenya |
2013-11-17 |
[Shabelle] Irish-born terrorist Samantha Lewthwaite, dubbed the White Widow, is wanted for seven murders in Kenya according to new reports. The Daily Mirror reports that security forces in the African state believe Lewthwaite has become a volatile maniac, leaving a trail of death and destruction in a bloody Dire Revenge™ campaign against those who cross her. She is now wanted for seven murders including the executions of two radical Mohammedan holy mans and two respected Protestant pastors according to police. They believe she ordered the murders of four religious leaders in Kenya and three others linked to her al-Shabaab ![]() ... the Islamic version of the old Somali warlord... terror group. Kenyan anti-terror police have named Lewthwaite as the chief suspect in the murder of Protestant pastors Charles Matole and Ebrahim Kidata. She is also wanted for the killings of radical Mohammedan holy mans Aboud Rogo Mohammed and his successor Sheik Ibrahim Rogo after falling out with them. Matole was shot in the head at his church in Mombasa. He was found on October 19 sitting in a chair still clutching his bible. The report says security sources believe he was executed after mum of four Lewthwaite, 29, became 'paranoid' over his contacts with Kenyan intelligence officials. The White Widow, linked with the recent Nairobi mall massacre, has also fallen foul of elders within al-Shabaab after demanding more control over its murderous activities and is locked in a power struggle according to the paper. An intelligence source said: "Samantha Lewthwaite is fighting for greater control of al-Shabaab which is angering the organization's hierarchy. "She has become paranoid and unreliable to the group after being on the run for so long. They believe her judgment is clouded and she could find herself out on her own very soon." East Kenya police commander Aggrey Adoli told the Daily Mirror that he fears Lewthwaite may be plotting even more bloodshed. He also understands that she has launched a huge drive to recruit young radical Mohammedans to her deadly cause. Adoli said: "We believe Samantha Lewthwaite is behind these seven killings as well as a gang of others. "We believe she is involved in the recruitment of jihadists and propagation of al-Shabaab and al-Qaeda activities in the country with other like minded individuals. Once we apprehend Samantha Lewthwaite she'll have a lot of questions to answer. "She is without a doubt an incredible threat to national and international security. We are working round the clock to bring her in to stop her causing more carnage." "She is wanted on charges of "murder and inciting Mohammedan youths to violence." Lewthwaite is believed to be hiding in Somalia. Adoli said: "We are doing our best investigating the murders and call on those with evidence to come forward." |
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Africa North |
Mombasa riots after Muslim cleric assassinated on road in re-enactment of previous assassination |
2013-10-05 |
Four people have been killed in Kenya's port of Mombasa during clashes between police and those angered at the killing of a Muslim cleric, the Red Cross says. Seven people have also been wounded during the disturbances, while a church was set alight. The cleric Ibrahim "Rogo" Omar and three other people were shot dead in Mombasa as they drove home on Thursday night after preaching. It comes two weeks after the deadly attack on a Nairobi shopping centre. Somali Islamist group al-Shabab, which is part of al-Qaeda, said its militants stormed the Westgate mall in the capital in retaliation for Kenya's military involvement in Somalia. Mr. Omar's killing is similar to that of Aboud Rogo Mohammed last year, which was followed by similar rioting in Mombasa. The car in which Mr. Omar was shot then smashed into the verge off the main coastal road north of Mombasa, not far from where Mr. Rogo was shot dead in his vehicle in August 2012. Mr. Rogo was alleged to have links with al-Shabab and some Muslims accused the Kenyan security forces of killing him - an allegation they denied. "That's not how we operate," Reuters news agency quoted Robert Kitur, Mombasa County police commander, as saying. The trouble began after Friday prayers when protesters began stoning cars and lighting bonfires as they clashed with police. At least one of those who died of their wounds in hospital had been shot, according to the Kenya Red Cross. Kenya's national crisis centre said three people had died of stab wounds, the AFP news agency reports. Police said they used tear gas to disperse the protesters who also set fire to a Salvation Army church in the Majengo district, a middle-class area of the city, which has a large Muslim population. Local imams reportedly called for calm. Eyewitnesses said police were also firing in the air to try to disperse the demonstrators. A BBC journalist heard sounds of gunshots being fired while on the phone to a local reporter. Mombasa city police chief Kipkemoi Rop said 24 people had been detained, as the force would not tolerate "unruly youth taking over the town", AFP reports. Correspondents say the Masjid Musa Mosque, which is on the same street as the Salvation Army church, is known to attract some radical followers. |
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Africa Horn |
Kenya charges Shabaab-linked radical preacher after riots |
2012-09-05 |
(Sh.M.Network)--A radical Kenyan preacher accused by the US of supporting Somalia's al Qaeda linked bully boyz was Monday charged with inciting violent protests, after he surrendered claiming he feared for his life. Abubaker Shariff Ahmed handed himself over to a court in the port city of Mombasa after the liquidation there last week of fellow holy man Aboud Rogo Mohammed by unknown gunnies sparked days of deadly rioting. Ahmed, also known as Makaburi, pled not guilty to charges of encouraging that violence, which saw two days of running battles, with grenades hurled at two police trucks, killing three officers and wounding over a dozen others. Like Ahmed, the murdered holy man -- popularly known as Rogo -- was also on United States sanctions lists for allegedly supporting neighbouring Somalia's turban Shabaab, including by recruiting and fundraising for the group. Following Rogo's murder, Ahmed is alleged to have called out from a mosque to supporters to target security officers and to torch churches in Mombasa, Kenya's main port and a key tourist town. He denies the charges. Rogo's supporters accused the security forces of murdering him, calling his death an "extra-judicial killing". The police reject the claim and have appealed for help in hunting down those responsible. But Ahmed, speaking to Kenya's Daily Nation newspaper on Monday just before he handed himself in to the authorities, said he feared for his life. "We are certain that there is a hit squad targeting Mohammedan holy mans and other Mohammedans perceived to be turbans," he told the newspaper. "They have accused us of terror but have refused to provide any evidence. Instead, they are now sending people to kill us," he added. Ahmed, speaking through his lawyer Mbugua Mureithi, denied prosecution claims in court that he had been running from the police. "My client was not hiding as no police came for him there was no attempt by police to arrest my client," Mureithi told the court. He was remanded in jug until September 5, when a bail hearing will be held. Both Ahmed and Rogo had fiercely opposed Kenya's invasion of southern Somalia last year to attack Shabaab bases. The US Treasury alleges that Ahmed is a "leading controller and recruiter of young Kenyan Mohammedans for 'action' in Somalia," and was a "close associate" of the late Rogo. He was placed on the US sanctions list in July of those "engaging in acts that directly or indirectly threaten the peace, security or stability of Somalia" and is accused of "mobilisation and management of funding for Al-Shabaab ![]() ... Harakat ash-Shabaab al-Mujahidin aka the Mujahideen Youth Movement. It was originally the youth movement of the Islamic Courts, now pretty much all of what's left of it. They are aligned with al-Qaeda but operate more like the Afghan or Pakistani Taliban... " The US say he made "frequent trips to Al-Shabaab strongholds in Somalia", had "strong ties" with senior Shabaab leaders and is a "recruiter and controller" for the hardline fighters in Mombasa. Human Rights Watch ... dedicated to bitching about human rights violations around the world... has called for a probe into Rogo's killing, noting it "follows the abductions and deaths earlier this year of several other people charged with recruitment and other offences related to the Shabaab." |
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Africa Horn |
Chaos In Mombasa Over Rogo Murder |
2012-08-29 |
[Nairobi Star] ONE man died and several others were maimed during riots sparked off by the shooting of controversial Islamic holy man Aboud Rogo Mohammed in Mombasa yesterday. The dead man, artisan Joseph Mureithi, was hit by a metal rod by rioting youths at Saba Saba near the Masjid Musa mosque where Rogo had set up his base. Four churches were vandalised - Neno Evangelist Centre, JCC at Buxton, PAG Ziwani, and another one. Rogo, his wife Khaniya Said Sagaar, his father Abdallah Ali, his five year old daughter Salha and a male relative were driving in a van from Kikambala towards town. Just before midday their vehicle was shot at by unknown people near the entrance to the Jomo Kenyatta Public Beach along the Mombasa-Malindi highway and very close to Bamburi cop shoppe. A Star photographer was close to the scene of the killing. Aboud Rogo was driving and was shot at least 14 times in chest. He lost control of the vehicle which landed in a ditch. His wife was shot in the right leg and was writhing in pain. Their daughter wailed for her father as she tried to crawl to where her mother was lying. Police arrived soon afterwards and sealed off the scene Rogo's wife refused any assistance from the police. "Ni nyinyi mapolisi mmemua. Hatutaki postmortem wala usaidizi wenyu ( It is you coppers who have killed him! we don't want a post-mortem or any help from you)," screamed Khaniya. Police said 15 gun shots were fired from close range at the driver's door. The bullets were 7.6mm calibre used by AK 47,said Mombasa DCIO Benedict Kigen. Members of Moslems for Human Rights arrived within minutes, took Rogo's body and buried him at Kiziwi Moslem cemetery. They also took Khaniya to hospital for treatment of her gunshot wound. The vehicle was towed to the Bamburi cop shoppe. Khaniya said her husband was taking her to hospital for a check up after she suffered a miscarriage two weeks ago. As the news spread, hundreds of youths took to the street and chaos broke out on Mombasa island including Posta, Kongowea, Majengo and Saba Saba. Angry youth carrying branches and stones vandalized bars, petrol stations and houses as they chanted Allahu Akbar. The rioting youth broke into shops, looted property and beat up people.They pelted motorists with stones and lit bonfires using tyres and other debris. Riot police and the GSU were deployed to disperse the youth who spread out to Bamburi and Kisauni. At Mewa hospital where the injured were taken for treatment, a vehicle belonging to the Muhuri lobby group was pelted with stones by angry relatives and friends who thought it was carrying journalists. Muhuri executive director Hussein Khalid said his two officers Topister Juma and Shirleen Njeri were maimed. "They thought my officers were members of the press. Moslem law prohibits an injured woman be photographed and that is why they chased them away," Khalid said. The police denied that they were responsible for Rogo's shooting. Coast CID boss Ambrose Munyasia said they were treating the incident as a "shoot and run" incident. Unconfirmed sources said a fleeing man was tossed in the calaboose Maw! They're comin' to get me, Maw! near the Mombasa Polytechnic by flying squad officers. Earlier this year Rogo claimed that his life was in danger and his lawyer Mureithi Mbugua alleged that police had planted incriminating evidence to implicate his client. In February, Rogo and Samir Khan were released on bond after being charged with being in possession of 102 bomb detonators, 3 guns and 119 bullets and had been released on bond. The case was to be heard on October 17 before principal magistrate K. Gacheru. Rogo also faced other cases in Nairobi including being a member of Al-Shabaab ![]() ... Harakat ash-Shabaab al-Mujahidin aka the Mujahideen Youth Movement. It was originally the youth movement of the Islamic Courts, now pretty much all of what's left of it. They are aligned with al-Qaeda but operate more like the Afghan or Pakistani Taliban... . In 2005 he was acquitted of involvement in the 2002 Paradise Hotel, Kikambala kaboom in which 14 people died. Moslem religious leaders yesterday condemned the killing and demanded that the police arrest those responsible. The Kenya National Moslem advisory council chairman Sheikh Juma Ngao said the police should also establish who murdered Samir Khan whose badly mutilated body was found dumped in Tsavo national park in April just hours after he was kidnapped from a bus. "Even if he had mistakes, the matter was in court. Even the late Osama bin Laden ... who walked in the Valley of the Shadow of Death and didn't make it out... 's allies are being held at Guantanamo bay prison. There are laws in this country and that is the way to go," said Ngao. Sheikh Dor of the Council of Imams and Preachers of Kenya demanded that the police resolve the matter. "They should not take us round in circles this time like they did in the Samir Khan case," he said. |
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Africa Subsaharan | |
Kenyan cleric shot dead, sparks riots in Mombasa | |
2012-08-27 | |
Hundreds of protesters smashed cars and torched churches in the Kenyan city of Mombasa on Monday after unknown gunmen shot dead a Muslim cleric accused by the United States of helping Islamist militants in Somalia. One protester was killed in the riots which erupted after Aboud Rogo Mohammed was shot on Monday, as youths from the port city's large Muslim population took to the streets complaining he had been deliberately targeted by police. "It's an attack on Muslims, and we will not take it lightly," said Suleiman Atham, one of the protesters. Deputy police chief Robert Kitur said Rogo - who faced terrorism charges over allegations he was recruiting non-Somali Africans for Somalia's al Shabaab militant group - was killed while driving in a private car. "Unknown gunmen attacked his vehicle ... sprayed it with bullets and killed him on the spot," Kitur said. "They must have been targeting him, and must have been trailing him for a while." In what police described as an act of impulse
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Africa: Subsaharan |
Mombasa bombing trial collapses |
2005-06-09 |
A Kenyan judge has thrown out charges against four men accused of murder in the case of the 2002 suicide bombing of an Israeli-owned hotel in Mombasa. High court justice John Osiemo said prosecutors had failed to prove that the men were connected to the attack. Correspondents say the trial was one of Kenya's first attempts to prosecute alleged terrorists. Fifteen people, including three Israeli tourists, died in the attack on the Paradise Hotel. The four suspects - Aboud Rogo Mohammed, Mohammed Kubwa, Omar Said Omar and Mohammed Ali Saleh Nabhan - are all Kenyans. Three other men are being tried concurrently for conspiracy to bomb the hotel. A judgement in the case is expected later this month. The four acquitted defendants left the courtroom to cries of "God is great". Accused Mohammed Nabhan welcomed the verdict. "It's fair, I'm quite happy I'm back with my family, justice has been done," he told the Associated Press news agency. The prosecution had argued that the four men had links to known terrorists. It was claimed in court that some of them had family ties to al-Qaeda operatives. But the judge said the prosecution's evidence did not connect the accused to the bombing. Under Kenyan law, judges are allowed to acquit defendants if they find the prosecution case too weak to answer. "Since ... the suicide bombers ... perished during the attack, there is no evidence whatsoever to connect the accused to the murder of the deceased persons," Judge Osiemo said, quoted by AFP news agency. "The prosecution has not established a prima facie case against the accused persons as required in criminal law to require the court to put them on their defence." Lawyers for the defendants said they planned to sue the government over their lengthy custody. The authorities have come under fire from human rights groups for delaying the proceedings and torturing suspects during the initial investigation. The government denies the allegations of torture. Most of the Kenyans who died in the bombing were members of a local dance group who were welcoming hotel guests. A simultaneous rocket attack on an Israeli airliner that took off from Mombasa airport failed. A group linked to Osama Bin Laden's al-Qaeda network has claimed responsibility for the attacks, which dealt a severe blow to Kenya's once-thriving tourism industry. |
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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 Novemberâs 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.
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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
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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