A 10-day extended detention order against a Senate employee held
over alleged links to the terrorist group Al-Shabaab is illegal, a
Nairobi court was told on Wednesday.
"The
Anti-Terrorism Police Unit made and was granted the request in the
absence of the suspect, which is in violation of the Constitution and
the Prevention of Terrorism Act,” lawyer Chacha Mwita told a magistrate
at the Milimani Law Courts, while applying for a production order for Mr
Ali Abdulmajid Ahmed.
“The orders attained are thus illegal and so is the continued stay of the respondent in police custody," he said.
Mr
Ahmed has been detained following "intelligence" reports that he may be
a spy working for Al-Shabaab and could be used to facilitate an attack
at the National Assembly.
"He was placed in police
custody on Sunday, April 20, after he presented himself to the Pangani
Police Station upon being summoned via a phone call," the lawyer said.
Mr
Mwita said that a respondent, such as Mr Ahmed, is "required by law to
be present to respond to an application seeking his further detention,
for the court to make a judicious decision".
He said
the police sneaked in an application in the suspect’s absence and a
magistrate went ahead to issue an order without involving him.
"Section
33 of the Prevention of Terrorism Act states that a police officer who
detains a suspect must produce the suspect before a court and apply in
writing for the extension of time for holding the suspect in custody,"
he said.
The lawyer added that in their application for
the extended detention, the police had indicated that it would be heard
inter partes.
FURTHER INVESTIGATIONS
Magistrate
Bernard Nzakyo gave the police the 10-day custodial order to conduct
further investigations into the suspect’s links to the alleged terror
plot to bomb Parliament.
The police had told the
magistrate that Mr Ahmed is believed to be an Al-Shabaab linkman on a
mission to assist the terrorist group in "casing" Parliament buildings
for a possible attack.
An affidavit presented before the magistrate stated that intelligence reports had linked the suspect to questionable activities.
"A
mobile phone belonging to the suspect is under analysis for any
incriminating evidence," police corporal Jackson Chacha stated in the
affidavit.
Mr Chacha stated that the suspect may be
charged with terrorism-related offences if investigators get enough
evidence to incriminate him.
The suspect has been detained at the Kileleshwa Police Station in Nairobi.
"He
is considered dangerous to the security of this country bearing in mind
the mayhem terrorism has caused before," the affidavit read.
It
is not the first time the suspect has been linked to terrorism. In 2011
he was investigated and "cleared," according to his lawyer.
His
arrest came after police said Al-Shabaab agents were plotting to plant
bombs in Parliament and other key government installations.
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