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Thursday, September 26, 2013

In Westgate, Al-Shabaab fought the wrong war, suffered the right defeat

Al-Shabaab terrorists who attacked the Westgate Mall in Nairobi, which claimed the lives of 68 people, and injured 175, were defeated.
After more bodies are retrieved from the collapsed floors of the mall, the casualty figures will rise.
The real defeat the terrorists suffered was not during the shoot-out with security forces. It happened further away in the other suburbs and the rest of Kenya. But ultimately, in the minds of the nation.
While people have to deal with the death of their loved ones and the destruction of livelihoods, for terrorists, the human kill is only a means to a bigger end.
They seek, as President Kenyatta and several commentators observed, to destroy the way of life of nations and peoples, and the things they hold dear. And in the process, to weaken them for the real battles that lie ahead.
For example, the September 11, 2011 attacks upon the US in New York and the Washington DC area killed nearly 3,000, including 19 terrorists.
In retaliation, the US attacked Afghanistan where the Al-Qaeda leadership was hiding out. America’s invasion of Iraq was driven by the fear that dictator Saddam Hussein would provide its enemies weapons of mass destruction that he allegedly had in his stores and the US would thus one day be finished off. Of course, it turned out Saddam didn’t have any such weapons.
However, since late 2001 this America “war on terror” had cost the lives of 5,281 servicemen and women as of April this year. And the number wounded as of last month was a staggering 671,846.
A recent study projected the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan could cost the US as high as $6 trillion (Sh522 trillion –357 times bigger than Kenya’s 2013 budget). In addition, America passed several draconian laws allowing the government to spy on private citizen’s communication, and to deny terrorist suspects trial in civilian courts.
US security agencies took to torturing suspected terrorists, tightened immigration, and introduced unreasonable airport searches.
Thousands of students could no longer get into America. Many ended up in Canada, whose universities now have an edge over America’s in scientific research.
Several scholars have attributed a large part of America’s current decline to “imperial overstretch”, and blowing away money it could have used to grow its economy on wars it can’t win. Therefore Al-Qaeda, Al-Shabaab’s godfather, could be said to have won its war against America.
Kenya’s case has been interesting. After the simultaneous 1998 bomb attacks on US embassies in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam — again the handiwork of Al-Qaeda — Tanzania and Uganda rushed through very stringent anti-terrorism laws.
Despite subsequent attacks on the Paradise Hotel in Mombasa, it took Kenya nearly another 10 years before it passed its anti-terrorism law, which is kindergarten stuff compared to Tanzania’s and Uganda’s.
Intriguing if you consider that Kenya suffered the most. There were about 212 people killed, and 4,000 wounded in Nairobi, compared to 11 killed in Dar es Salaam and 85 wounded.
Likewise, the Westgate Mall attack didn’t spark a wave of paranoia or anti-Muslim hysteria as it did in the US. It did the opposite — gave a nation still divided by the March elections, neighbourhoods tormented by criminals, consumers buffeted by high prices, and workers stuck in bleak lives because of low wages, a higher cause to rally around. Political leaders who had been at each other’s necks, closed ranks.
Because Al-Shabaab is domiciled in Somalia, and the terrorists at Westgate sought to slaughter only non-Muslims (although in the end they killed several Muslims too), there was always the danger that there would be a backlash against Somalis and Muslims.
Yet, in the Somali-dominated Eastleigh suburb, Somalis turned out in record numbers to donate blood to victims. And even more dramatically, in the teeming Dadaab refugee camps, they lined up in their thousands. Ordinarily, you would not expect a long blood donation queue in an African refugee camp.
The attacks did three things. They gave Kenya something it sorely needed — a greater and uniting national purpose. After a very long time, it inspired the people to embrace the motherland.
And it brought out the compassionate side of the nation. I bet none of those were

THE National Intelligence Service gave advance warning of the Westgate attack, according to some security officers. Gen Michael Gichangi, NIS Director General, is due to meet MPs of the Defense and Foreign Relations committee this morning. Gichangi apparently would prefer to testify in public but Defense committee chairman Ndungu Gethenji (Tetu) has indicated that the meeting will be closed to the media. Two NIS officers who did not want their identities revealed yesterday told the Star that their organisation had given advance warning of the attack to Inspector General of Police Service David Kimaiyo and Criminal Investigations Department director Ndegwa Muhoro. They sensationally claimed that Kimaiyo and Muhoro should be investigated for failing to act on intelligence briefs given to them. They also claimed that some senior officers within the Office of the President should be investigated for “suppressing” intelligence reports. They said NIS was not to blame for the Westgate attack that has claimed over 100 lives. It has also emerged that a policewoman has recorded a statement after her brother who works for the NIS warned her not to visit Westgate on Saturday because of an impending attack. The NIS officer is being sought for interrogation. The pregnant policewoman regularly went window shopping in Westgate on Saturdays. "She has told police that her brother who is a NIS officer warned her not to visit Westgate that Saturday because she would not be able to run with her bulging tummy," a senior officer involved in the investigation said yesterday. -The policewoman was picked up from her home on Tuesday night and taken to CID headquarters on Kiambu road where she was interrogated for four hours before being allowed to go home. The NIS officers told the Star yesterday that NIS Director General Michael Gichangi was willing to testify in the open in today’s meeting with the Defense committee of the National Assembly. “I can assure you that the director general is willing to restore the image of the intelligence service because of the negative publicity it has received due to the Westgate attack and the many previous security lapses in the country,” said one NIS officer. “We understand that the director general will be appearing before the committee tomorrow (Thursday) and it is his desire that the meeting is open to the media so that the public can get to know who failed in the line of duty. He wants to clean our name and set the record straight,” the officer said. The two officers said the NIS had also warned the police about the danger before the Baragoi massacre but the police ignored the intelligence reports. However Defense committee chairman Ndungu Gethenji (Tetu) has insisted that the meeting will be closed to the public and the media. “No, it is not open due to the ongoing security operations,” said Gethenji in a short text reply. However Kimini MP Chris Wamalwa, a member of the Defense committee, said that the meeting should be open because there was nothing to hide. Members can vote to overturn the chairman’s unilateral decision, Wamalwa told the Star on Wednesday before he left the country for official duty. “It is wrong for the chairman to imply that his unilateral decision may be taken to mean the collective resolution of the members. We will be proposing to discuss the conduct of the chairman and these are some of the issues,” said Wamalwa. Typically, the committee’s meetings are held behind closed doors except for the vetting of principal secretaries. Last week the committee met Defense Cabinet Secretary Raychalle Omamo in private to hear a report on Kenya’s border security with Somalia. Yesterday MPs questioned the competence of the NIS and called for its total overhaul and commended the police for their rescue work at Westgate. They argued that the huge allocations to the NIS were not commensurate with its output. “The country must get to the root cause of the matter. It was a horrendous act that calls for the dismantling of the gang. It can only be defeated by an efficient intelligence system in place,” said Asman Kamama, chairman of the House committee on Administration and National Security during an adjournment motion on the Westgate attack. Meanwhile Israeli, German and American investigators are assisting their Kenyan counterparts in a forensic audit of Westgate on the fifth day after the attacks. "We strongly believe that there is an insignificant number of bodies still remaining in the building. We are conducting forensic investigations which is an elaborate process that includes fingerprinting bodies, DNA process and ballistic examination. We expect the process to take not less than seven days," Internal Cabinet Secretary Joseph Ole Lenku said yesterday. He was accompanied by Chief of Defence Forces General Julius Karangi and his deputy Lt Gen. Samson Mwathethe, Director of CID Muhoro Ndegwa, NIS boss Gen Michael Gichangi and Cabinet secretaries Amina Mohammed and Raychalle Omamo. The stench of rotting flesh from the collapsed building occasionally reached the nearby Oshwal Centre as the forensic team started going through Westgate looking for booby traps, bodies and explosives. Five military armoured personnel carriers and six military trucks sped out of Westgate at 11am yesterday indicated that the siege had finally come to an end.

THE National Intelligence Service gave advance warning of the Westgate attack, according to some security officers.
Gen Michael Gichangi, NIS Director General, is due to meet MPs of the Defense and Foreign Relations committee this morning.
Gichangi apparently would prefer to testify in public but Defense committee chairman Ndungu Gethenji (Tetu) has indicated that the meeting will be closed to the media.
Two NIS officers who did not want their identities revealed yesterday told the Star that their organisation had given advance warning of the attack to Inspector General of Police Service David Kimaiyo and Criminal Investigations Department director Ndegwa Muhoro.
They sensationally claimed that Kimaiyo and Muhoro should be investigated for failing to act on intelligence briefs given to them.
They also claimed that some senior officers within the Office of the President should be investigated for “suppressing” intelligence reports.
They said NIS was not to blame for the Westgate attack that has claimed over 100 lives.
It has also emerged that a policewoman has recorded a statement after her brother who works for the NIS warned her not to visit Westgate on Saturday because of an impending attack. The NIS officer is being sought for interrogation.
The pregnant policewoman regularly went window shopping in Westgate on Saturdays.
"She has told police that her brother who is a NIS officer warned her not to visit Westgate that Saturday because she would not be able to run with her bulging tummy," a senior officer involved in the investigation said yesterday.
- See more at: http://www.the-star.co.ke/news/article-137366/nis-gave-advance-westgate-warning#sthash.BpIb8CZH.dpuf

Skip trials at own peril Fatou Bensouda warns Deputy President William Ruto

International Criminal Court Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda has fired a warning salvo to Deputy President William Ruto that he risks arrest if he skips trial proceedings without permission of the judges.
The warning comes just days after the office of the prosecutor suggested somebody else should be sworn in on a temporary basis to discharge Ruto’s duties as deputy head of state.
“The Prosecution notes Ruto is not here ICC voluntarily, but on compulsion of summons and risks arrest if he defaults,” Bensouda warned as she opposed Ruto’s plea to the Appeals Chamber to lift an order compelling him to be in court.
The Chief Prosecutor maintained Ruto is an accused person before the ICC and while presumed innocent, “cannot expect that life would continue normally”.
“The effect of the confirmation of charges is that a trial will ensue in the normal course and the accused, if not in custody, will have to make the necessary arrangements to attend that trial,” she charged.
On Monday evening, Ruto’s defence counsel Karim Khan lodged a fresh request to the Appeals Chamber to excuse his client from being physically present in court during his trial. Ruto pointed to the one-week adjournment following the bloody Westgate Shopping Mall (Nairobi) terror attack, arguing such breaks would result in delays in proceedings or interruptions of witness testimony.
But in her response on Thursday, Bensouda insisted Khan’s new argument including the tragic events at Westgate that led to the adjournment Monday do not change the reasoning of the Appeals Chamber’s decision.

Continuous presence
“The new facts raised have no bearing on the Appeals Chamber’s reasons for granting suspensive effect. If the trial continues without Ruto and the appeal succeeds, the results will be difficult to correct and the consequences may be irreversible. Therefore, the request should be rejected,” the Chief Prosecutor said.
For the first time this week, President Uhuru Kenyatta also requested Trial Chamber V(b) to excuse him from continuous presence at trial, citing his new roles as president.
Bensouda is yet to react to the application by the President.
The ruling by the five-judge Bench and headed by the ICC president Judge Sang-Hyun Song is expected soon.

world apart


ONLY ONE NAME KIMAIYO IS FROM OUTSIDE THE PRESIDENT PROVINCE WOW

Today, the president meets the national security council comprising Githu Muigai, Mutea Iringo, Thuita Mwangi, Ndegwa Muhoro, Micheal Gichangi and David Kimaiyo. We are one and united.

This is yet another telling story how the Westgate Mall massacre was staged as an escape strategy to avoid ICC trials. This guy confirms in this interview that he is not a police officer; he has never been trained in security operations and yet he was the most visible operative in the so-called rescue operation. Kenyans are we this stupid to believe such non sense? Where were the police all this time! How can a civilian be so daring as demonstrated in this video? Kenyans and the world need to hear more from this man! Be the Judge

Informants warned of the looming Westgate attack (+playlist)

It is indeed shocking, The late Radio presenter lying mercilessly on the ground after she was shot by the Alshabaabs. She was 7 months pregnant by the time of the incident.

CAN JUBILEE TELL US WHERE THESE MISSING PERSONS ARE? DOES IT MEAN THERE WERE NO HOSTAGES AND THE GOVT WAS INTENTIONALLY LYING TO KENYANS?

NAIROBI; KENYA: Forensic investigators sifted through the rubble at the Westgate Mall as questions lingered about the fate of dozens reported missing at the end of the deadly four-day siege.
Authorities had indicated the terrorists had hostages inside the upscale shopping complex during the standoff, but authorities, curiously, appeared to avoid the matter or give inconclusive responses after prodding.
President Kenyatta on Tuesday night said three floors of the building had collapsed and “there were several bodies still trapped in the rubble including some terrorists.”
On Wednesday, Interior Cabinet Secretary Joseph Ole Lenku said although some bodies could still be trapped in the rubble, the number of the dead “is not expected to increase significantly.”
Officially, 67 people — 61 civilians and six security agents —  were killed during the attack after gunmen struck the shopping complex on Saturday morning firing indiscriminately at shoppers and staff.
But the Kenya Red Cross Society (KRCS) reported a death toll of 69, and added 63 were recorded as missing.

The Government has blamed the inconsistency on a possible “double count” by aid workers. However, the last update given by KRCS yesterday afternoon points out that “the number of persons reported to KRCS as missing has risen to 71.”
Other than being involved in forensics, according to the Times of Israel, the role of Israelis in the Westgate Mall situation has not been clear.
On Monday, Israeli defence officials confirmed a team was dispatched to Nairobi within hours of the hostage crisis, but said that armed fighting units were not part of the delegation.
 On Wednesday morning, soldiers from Langata’s Maroon Commandos were among the last combat units to leave the mall after the final assault early Tuesday.
Other teams that took part in the operation were the Kenya Defence Forces’ 75 Artillery, 20 Para, 30 Special Forces and 40 Rangers Strike Force unit.
“We left behind a team of Israeli experts who came with small dogs with big ears to start carrying out forensic (investigation),” said a soldier involved in the final operation.
The terrorists are said to have stuffed most of the bodies in specific rooms that were close to the source of the fire and where part of the building caved in.
“It might take several days to retrieve some of the bodies that might have been trapped in the debris,” said another soldier.

Meet the Artist Who Paints With His Pénís

Since then Tim Patch has really became a master of such an unconventional painting technique.

It's really symbolic that Prickasso, who uses his child-making órgán, therefore gives birth to new pictures.

Tim Patch admits that he is more interested in drawing women’s portraits. Politicians celebrities and nature have a lower priority in his works.

It’s hard to imagine how these ladies feel, as they see a nakéd man is just several meters away from them…





Inside Al shabaab by John Allan Namu

Kimaiyo announces mini-reshuffle in police force to boost security

NAIROBI, KENYA: Four senior police officers including North Eastern Regional Coordinator (RC) Mr Charlton Mureithi have been moved in a mini reshuffle.
Mureithi has been moved to City Hall in Nairobi to be in charge of the newly created Security and Compliance section. He will be replaced by Mr Henry Barmao from police headquarters.
The new Eastern RC is Mr Yaa Baya, formerly the chief licencing officer. Baya will replace Mr Mercus Ochola who has been moved to Kiganjo police college and named the deputy commandant.
The changes were announced by Inspector General of Police David Kimaiyo as part of efforts to bolster security in the affected areas.
Most parts of North Eastern had been experiencing insecurity and terror related incidents in the past months which claimed more than 100 lives and injured tens others.
But since April, there has been improved security in the area until Wednesday night when gunmen killed a man in a grenade attack in Wajir Town.
A member of the gang identified as Ayub Omar Gullet, was arrested by police after he was shot on the stomach by his colleagues.
He is being interrogated. Another gang raided a police post in Mandera on Thursday  and killed two officers before torching 11 vehicles in rage.
They also bombed the local DO's office before they escaped with the officers’ guns.

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