Mr Joseph Mbilinyi, Rashid’s former headteacher shows the Muslim cap
used by his now infamous student. PHOTO | SHARON SHAUWA
Moshi. When Fatma Ali said goodbye to her son in
January, she expected to see him again three months later—not as a
terror suspect but as a brilliant science student coming home for a
break.
Little did she know it, but the next time she
would see him would be when the 21-year-old was under arrest in Garissa.
His crime: Taking part in deadly attacks that left 148 people dead.
Rashid Charles Mberesero did not see his father
for 20 years and had been raised by a single mother from 1994, when his
parents separated after endless family squabbles.
But as the Form Five student bid his mother
goodbye as he returned to Bihawana High School in Dodoma, he had a big
secret in his heart.
Deep inside, he was already a dangerous terrorist,
though his mother saw only a good boy who passed his examinations and
join Advanced Secondary School to study Physics, Chemistry and Biology.
Four months after the two bid each other goodbye,
bad news arrived from Kenya. Rashird had been arrested for allegedly
taking part in a terror attack in which 148 people were killed, most of
them students at Garissa University.
Rashid’s mother was devastated and shocked. She
had hoped to have a doctor, an engineer or anything valuable, as her
son—and now her hopes were shattered.
She said: “I still do not know the person who
enticed my son to join the Al-Shabaab and I have been saddened by the
news that he has been arrested in Kenya.’’
According to Fatma, the family only realised that
Rashid had been arrested through a television broadcast. “I think he met
these terrorists at his school,’’ she added.
She denies, though, that the-21-year-old was a
resident of Usangi village in Mwanga District and clarifies that he was
from Gonja and studied at the local secondary school—and passed with
flying colours.
“He was selected to join Bihawana high school in
Dodoma and came home for his holiday before he said good-bye to me when
going back to school,’’ she added.
Boy meets dad after 20 years
When Kilimanjaro-based transporter Charles Temba finally met his son last year, it was a happy reunion—and supposedly the beginning of a new chapter in their lives. The two had not seen each other since 1994, when the parents separated. He was pretty young at the time.
Mr Temba admits that Rashird is his biological
son, born in 1994, but he had lived with his mother all his life. “I
have never stayed with him for all those years,” he recalls. “He has
lived with his mother since 1994.’’
This is why, Mr Temba says, when the two were
first introduced, he saw a new life, a happy beginning of another
chapter with the son he had not seen for 20 years.
But, unknown to Mr Temba, the new-found reunion
would soon be shattered—not by separation this time but by his actions
as a father. After the family reunion, the first thing Mr Temba did was
to convince his son to convert to Christianity.
But Rashid vehemently rejected the idea on the
grounds that he could not suddenly ditch he religion he had followed
faithfully for 20 years, ever since he was a child.
Although the 21-year-old Rashid, who was arrested
in Kenya last week for allegedly taking part in a brutal terror attack
at Garissa University, rejected his father’s call, he did attend church
three times—but only because his father told him to do so.
The couple separated in 1994, when the boy was a
year old. Mr Mberesero claims he lost contact with him until last year,
when his former wife introduced the two.
After snubbing efforts to get him to convert to
Christianity, Rashid’s relationship with his father was strained and he
stopped communicating with him.
According to Mr Temba, Fatuma introduced his son
to him last year and he advised him to change his religion. “I took him
to three consecutive church services and tried to convince him to change
his religion but my son snubbed the request,” he recalls. The young man
then cut off links with him.
To Rashird, who was a form five student at
Bihawana High School in Dodoma—studying Physics, Chemistry and
Biology—the abrupt end of the reunion with his father was the beginning
of a new chapter in his life—joining the Al-Shabaab terrorists.
To his father, who had hoped for a happy life with
his son after 20 years years, it was an abrupt end to their
relationship. Mr Temba says he was shocked to learn that his son was
being accused of taking part in the gruesome attacks masterminded by
Al-Shabaab at Garissa University. He used to own Chatco buses before
opting for trucks and has not been in touch with his son since last
year.
Shock to parents, leader
The news of Mr Mberesero’s arrest came soon after the massacre
at Garissa University College on Thursday and his link to Kilimanjaro
came as a shock to most residents of the region, including the Mwanga MP
and Minister for Water, Prof Jumanne Maghembe.
Asked how she felt when a resident of her
constituency was linked with a terror group, Same East MP Anne Kilango
Malecela said the news came as a shock. “I am saddened by this
information and I think it is high time our security operatives
increased their intelligence because there are bad indicators of
terrorism,’’ said Ms Kilango, who is also the deputy minister for
Education and Vocational Training.
Maore ward Councillor Hamad Sempobe described Mr
Mberesero as a controversial young man who was suspected of using drugs.
But he was quick to point out that he later changed his behaviour and
appreared to be a God-fearing man.
Kilimanjaro Regional Commissioner Leonidas Gama
said the government would take news of the arrest of a Tanzanian
national seriously even if it meant cracking down on the network of
people suspected to have links with Al-Shabaab.
“After receiving all this information, we made a
follow-up including his communications in order to establish whether he
received his training outside the country or was recruited here,’’ said
the RC.
Appearing in court today
The-21-year-old student will appear before a
Nairobi court today. The other suspects were charged on Tuesday with
aiding Al-Shabaab militants in their attack on the institution.
According to the prosecution, the accused were in touch with the
attackers before the incident and even assisted in delivering weapons.
Prosecutor Daniel Karuri said the Tanzanian
national was not in court because he had travelled with detectives to
Garissa to help with more investigations. He is said to have confessed
to being a member of the terrorist group.
“Investigations so far have established that the
suspects had contact with the attackers,” Mr Karuri told the court on
Tuesday, adding that preliminary investigations on his call data had
revealed that Mr Mberesero had been in constant communication with
several contacts in Somalia suspected to be Al-Shabaab operatives.
The Tanzanian national is said to have been in his
hideout for eight hours before he was arrested. He is said to have
played dead, lying among the bodies, but was arrested later as he hid on
the roof of one of the buildings—carrying bombs all the while
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