By VINCENT AGOYA
In Summary
- Mohamed Ahmed, a madrassa teacher, lost his appeal against an earlier ruling that declined his release stating he remains in custody over security reasons.
A court has for a second time rejected a request
to have one of the suspects in the Westgate shopping mall attack
released on bond.
Mr Mohamed Ahmed, a madrassa
teacher, lost his appeal against an earlier ruling that declined his
release stating he remains in custody over security reasons.
The court said it had taken
judicial notice of the numerous terrorism acts in the country and cannot
risk releasing the suspect facing a “serious charge” emanating from
one of such atrocities which is “still fresh in the minds of the
citizens.”
Mr Ahmed, is charged alongside
three others -Mr Liban Abdullah, Mr Adan Dheq and Mr Hussein Hassan. The
four suspects have been linked to the Westgate shopping mall terrorist
attack in Nairobi on September 21, 2013 that killed at least 67 people.
Mr Ahmed is further accused of
giving shelter to one Abdikadir Hared Mohammed alias Mohammed Hussein at
Salman Al-Faris Madrassa on Eastleigh’s Muyuyu Avenue on October 7.
The prosecution says he
harboured a fugitive he “knew had committed a terrorist act.” He is also
accused of obtaining a Kenyan identity card at the national
registration bureau in Mandera town by false pretences. He faces further
charges of being in the country illegally.
The affidavit, sworn by a senior
ranking anti-terrorism investigator, which two magistrates have upheld
states that the suspects are believed to have been involved in the
attack alongside accomplices who were either killed in the hostage
rescue operation or escaped and are on the run.
According to the prosecution the four suspects were either “directly or indirectly” involved in the attack.
Forty witnesses have been lined up for the trial which begins mid January 2014.
The suspect had told court that bail was his constitutional right and that he remained innocent until proven otherwise.
He had also opined that the fact that suspected
accomplices are yet to be apprehended should not be used to determine
his fate. He had also sworn to abide by whatever conditions the court
may have pegged on his release.
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