PHOTO | FILE President Uhuru Kenyatta with Deputy President William
Ruto and Defence Secretary Raychelle Omamo address the nation from State
House, after the end of the Westgate Mall siege in September last
year.
NATION
Will President Uhuru Kenyatta now
appoint a commission of inquiry into Westgate terrorist attack after a
joint committee of Parliament found no one responsible for security
lapses that led to the attack?
This is one of the big
questions with the revelation that the joint House committee which
tabled its report before Parliament in December was non-committal on who
should take responsibility for the attack and only blaming government
institutions for the brazen attack.
According to the
report, staff in the Immigration Department, Registration of Persons
department and the Police Service should be blamed for the attack that
killed 67 and maimed over 180 people.
While declaring
the end of the three-day siege in September last year, President
Kenyatta announced that he would appoint a commission of inquiry to
investigate security lapses that resulted in the September 21 attack.
In
October, Attorney General Githu Muigai was quoted on France 24 channel
saying the President is waiting for Parliamentary investigations among
others process to run the course before the commission is established.
“It
(commission of Inquiry) will happen because we are committed to that.
We weighed that doing this immediately against waiting for all the
forensic reports and all the other technical reports; we thought that we
should allow this to go forward first. There was a parliamentary
inquiry, we thought it should wind up first, and there were criminal
inquiries by the Kenya criminal investigations department and other
friendly investigating agencies assisting us. We thought all this should
go first and they should form part of the material we use in the
commission of inquiry,” said Prof Muigai.
The
Parliamentary commitee report contains the much awaited forensic audit
report which is yet to be made public. The forensic audit was done by a
multi-agency security team which also involved American FBI.
According
to the forensic audit report, four terrorists were involved in the
report. The terrorists were Mohamed Abdi Noor (Somali national),
Mohammed Hassan Dhulhulow a.k.a Abu Baraa Al Sudani (Norwegian), Yahye
Osman Ahmed a.k.a Arab (Somali national) and Ahmed Hassan Abukar
(Somali national).
“All the four (4) terrorists were
killed during confrontation with the security forces. Their body parts,
weapons and personal effects were recovered from the scene of attack,”
says the forensic audit which was an appendage of the report.
The
audit says that the body parts found at the ruined building and guns
recovered at the venue belonged to the terrorists. The ammunition
recovered was for AK47 rifles. Also recovered from the scene were two G3
rifles, one Scar rifle and four live grenades.
“Body
parts including one in a military boot were recovered from the scene on
October 1, 2013. Two bodies believed to be of military personnel, one M4
rifle and a military knife were also recovered from the scene on
October 2, 2013,” says the report.
No comments :
Post a Comment