Tuesday
September 4, 2012
September 4, 2012
News
By NYAMBEGA GISESA ngisesa@ke.nationmedia.com
Posted Sunday, September 2 2012 at 23:27
Posted Sunday, September 2 2012 at 23:27
In Summary
- Mr Ahmed claimed there is a plot by Kenyan security agencies supported by outside forces to assassinate him.
Mr Said Abubaker Shariff Ahmed alias Makaburi, who is
wanted in connection with the Mombasa riots has claimed he is a target
of a police hit squad.
Last week, police obtained a warrant of arrest for
Mr Ahmed, who they blame for the violence that followed the killing of
Al-Shabaab suspect Aboud Rogo.
Four people, including three security agents, were
killed in two days of chaos in which four churches were also looted and
torched.
Speaking in an exclusive interview with the Nation from
his hideout in the coastal town, Mr Ahmed claimed there is a plot by
Kenyan security agencies supported by outside forces to assassinate him.
He admitted that Sheikh Rogo, who was accused by
the United Nations and the US of being Al-Shabaab’s chief agent in
Kenya, was his close associate and best friend.
He also appeared to suggest that he had links with
the Somalia terror group by saying that youths in Mombasa had asked him
how they could get help from the rebels to avenge Sheikh Rogo’s killing.
“Youths have asked me if they can get help from
Al-Shabaab,” he said. Mr Ahmed said Kenya, whose forces have been
fighting Al-Shabaab in Somalia since last year, should leave the Horn of
Africa country alone.
The Kenya Defence Forces, he said, was leading an
illegal fight in Somalia. “Al-Shabaab are Somalis. They should be left
to rule Somalia ... not a bunch of people who meet in Nairobi hotels to
declare themselves rulers of Somalia.”
He added that while Al-Shabaab have not armed him,
the Kenyan and US governments were after his life. “We are certain that
there is a hit squad targeting Muslim clerics and other Muslims
perceived to be extremists.
Share This Story
"These mercenaries are monitoring our phones, our lives and
then killing us. We believe that American, British and Israeli security
agencies are involved,” Mr Ahmed said.
According to the police, Mr Ahmed incited youths to
avenge Sheikh Rogo’s death through violent riots aimed at churches and
Christians.
Brutal murder
“The brutal murder of Muslim cleric Aboud Rogo has
saddened us. While his death is being investigated, we will hunt down
those responsible for the violent demonstrations and arrest them. They
can hide from justice for now, but not forever,” Coast province police
chief Aggrey Adoli said.
On Sunday, the Coast PCIO, a Mr Muasya, said police
were still on the trail of Mr Ahmed and other suspects over the
violence. Also in their crosshairs is Sheikh Abu Qatada, who also spoke
to the Nation on Sunday.
The 43-year-old said that he kept away from the
demonstrations because he expected the police to link him with whatever
was happening.
“I was not there. I was at home and the only time I
left the house was when I went to see Rogo’s wife who was in hospital. I
was afraid that the police might also kill her.”
Mr Ahmed asked this Nation reporter to
rush to Mombasa and meet him before his assassination. After almost two
days of playing hide-and-seek games, his confidants led the reporter to
his hideout located near a mosque.
Mr Ahmed is one of the three Kenyans on the US government Sanctions List for alleged involvement in terror activities. (READ: Obama blacklists three Kenyans over links with Al-Shabaab militants)
The others are Sheikh Rogo and Omar Awadh Omar, who is currently
in a Ugandan jail, accused of involvement in the 2010 world Cup
bombings in Kampala which killed 70 people.
“I earn from two flats that I have rented to 14
tenants, half of them Christians. I don’t have a bank account and no
savings. So, what assets of mine did the US government freeze?” he
asked.
Travel bans
Other than the US government indictment, on August
23, the UN Security Council Committee on Somalia and Eritrea added his
name to a list of individuals and entities subject to travel bans,
assets freezes and targeted arms embargoes.
The UN said Mr Ahmed is a “leading facilitator and
recruiter of young Kenyan Muslims for violent militant activity in
Somalia, and a close associate of Aboud Rogo. He provides material
support to extremist groups in Kenya (and elsewhere in East Africa).
Through his frequent trips to Al-Shabaab
strongholds in Somalia, including Kismayu, he has been able to maintain
strong ties with senior Al-Shabaab members.”
The Security Council also said that he was “engaged
in the mobilisation and management of funding for Al-Shabaab… and
preached at mosques in Mombasa that young men should travel to Somalia,
commit extremist acts, fight for Al-Qaeda, and kill US citizens.”
It further added that he is “a leader of a
Kenya-based youth organisation in Mombasa with ties to Al-Shabaab” and
also accused him of acting as a “recruiter and facilitator for
Al-Shabaab in the Majengo area of Mombasa.”
Mr Ahmed was first arrested in late December 2010
on suspicion of involvement in the bombing of a bus heading to Kampala
from Nairobi. “For almost two years now, I report every Tuesday to the
police, I notify them each time I want to travel and I have never missed
going to court.
"But despite this, the case has not progressed much. If I am
guilty, let them provide evidence and jail or kill me,” he said. He
added that the US government is yet to respond to requests by his
lawyers to furnish him with any evidence they have against him.
Accused of terror
“They have accused us of terror, but have refused
to provide any evidence. Instead, they are now sending people to kill
us,” he said, adding that nothing was proved in court against Sheikh
Rogo.
Mr Ahmed defended the controversial cleric, who he
said he had known for nearly a decade. He accused the police of using
Sheikh Rogo and himself as “pawns in the war on terror.”
He said that the only evidence that the police had
against him and Sheikh Rogo was a notebook in the pockets of the alleged
bus bomber.
Asked what he thought would happen to him if
arrested, Mr Ahmed said: “I know I am going to die. I know they will
kill me. It’s only the date that I am not sure of.”
No comments:
Post a Comment