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SHOCKING: The people BEHIND Terrorist Attacks in Kenya

SHOCKING: The people BEHIND Terrorist Attacks in Kenya

July 11, 2014

Truth: Who’s Really Behind Terrorist Attacks in Kenya?
By Tres Thomas

Terrorist operations in Nairobi, Mombasa, Mpeketoni and other sites in Kenya’s urban and coastal towns have driven a polemic debate about who exactly is responsible.

Before and after al-Shabaab’s September 2013 attack at the Westgate Mall, dozens of unclaimed grenade and IED explosions in the country caused considerable confusion among the public about whether the bombs were the work of al-Shabaab, local affiliate al-Hijra, or even “false flag” attacks by rival Kenyan businessmen.

Now that al-Shabaab has increased the number of attacks it has claimed in Kenya, Uhuru Kenyatta’s administration has been absolving them at each opportunity and blaming various opposition groups and politicians instead.

If Uhuru is correct in claiming that al-Shabaab (and its local affiliate al-Hijra) are not responsible for recent attacks, it would mean that the estimated 700 al-Hijra members and countless al-Shabaab militants (from various countries) that are able to cross the porous border with Somalia have been decisively silent in recent months.

In many ways, this is an unlikely proposition.

To many observers, Uhuru’s deflection of al-Shabaab claims is a continuation of a strategy in which he has blamed the opposition for using “hate speech” and incitement that could be used to instigate early elections–or worse–mass violence at a level seen during the ’07-’08 election crisis that could force another coalition government.

If you believe the hype, it’s Raila’s would-be coup by another name.

These days, Uhuru’s simmering allegations have thickened to the point of blaming rival political elements for terrorist attacks as well.

The strategy could easily backfire.

If Uhuru’s allegations are credible that politicians, aggrieved Coastal squatters, criminal gangs, and separatist groups all have the capability and desire to organize attacks at the current magnitude, this would be a damning revelation about the ineffectiveness of the administration’s post-Westgate response to insecurity.

But all these claims hinge of evidence that is hard to sort through.

Lack of Clear Evidence

The biggest problem with Uhuru’s claims is that clear cut evidence has not been presented about who has been responsible for most of the attacks.

For example, the alleged driver of Mpeketoni militants Diana Salim Suleiman claimed he was viciously beaten and his matatu hijacked as militants forced him to act as the chaffeur from hell during the June 15 attacks claimed by al-Shabaab.
While some may doubt Suleiman’s story, his portrayal of events was mirrored in the subsequent attack at Gamba in which Kenyan police officers say militants “got to the police station by car-jacking a truck and killing its three occupants.”

Additionally, the Kenyan government (GoK) said it had “prior intelligence” of an imminent threat around Lamu before the Mpeketoni attack. This would ostensibly indicate that GoK would have some tangible proof of key individuals or groups that were organizing the attack.

However, after the attack, United Democratic Forum (UDF) member and Lamu governor Issa Timamy was booked on murder/terrorism charges without any convincing evidence being presented publicly. In fact, police even asked for more time after his arrest to search for more evidence–all signs that this was not a slam dunk case as of yet.

After al-Shabaab claimed carrying out operations in the Hindi and Gamba areas, Kenyan police blamed the Mombasa Republican Council (MRC) separatists after finding hastily scribbled messages referencing the group (and CORD leader Raila Odinga) on a small school blackboard.

But the meaning of the messages was not perfectly clear.

The first message read in Kiswahili “Raila [is] sufficient.” This could have been a reference to his call for Kenyan troops to withdraw from Somalia–or any other number of interpretations. The second message appeared to be directed at MRC members–not from them as interpreted by Kenyan police. It called for “sleeping” Muslims in MRC to “wake up”–followed by very specific anti-Uhuru anti-Christian imperatives.

If this was the basis for blaming MRC, Kenyan police look as if they have a case that is weak enough to preclude singling the group out as exclusively responsible–especially considering the tactics used in the operations.

The Quran tests used in militants’ recent Coast attacks mirror similar tactics used at the Westgate siege, which was organized by al-Qaeda East Africa apprentice/al-Shabaab commander Abdulkadir Mohamed Abdulkadir “Ikrima.”

Notably, the Westgate attack also may have used the resources of an al-Hijra-linked al-Shabaab leader for Kenyans named Sheikh Ahmad Iman Ali–who may have a hand in Coast attacks as well.

The recite-or-die tactic does not appear to have been used by other opposition groups in Kenya–though the knife and arson attacks that have occurred are alleged modes of operation for MRC.

Additionally, it has been rumored in the past that al-Shabaab has tried to recruit among extreme factions of MRC–which has both Christian and Muslim membership. This convenient exploitation is possible, and al-Shabaab has recruited from other East African groups with longstanding grievances including Uamsho and the Ansar Muslim Youth Centre in Tanzania.

Yet no current proof has been presented that collaboration with MRC has been operationalized in recent attacks.

Setting MRC to the side, there are plenty of other grievances holders on the Coast that still seek redress.
Since GoK has failed to address the fact that many local communities on the Coast have had land stolen from them by government officials and other tribes in the last several decades, it is no surprise that al-Shabaab would be recruiting among them.

As many of these potential recruits would be Muslim “squatters,” their narratives are interesting to unwrap in the regional context.

When Coast attackers speak of “Christian invaders” stealing territory and abusing Muslims in “Muslim lands,” their argument is applicable to them both in Kenya and Somalia.

Al-Shabaab is using this duality to its advantage by recruiting and carrying out attacks in both countries.

Contrastingly, Uhuru is misguidedly re-framing the argument as a mostly local and tribal issue–seemingly in pursuit of his own political agenda while ignoring the larger context.

Uhuru is able to redirect blame at “local political networks” rather than open up the possibility that extremist groups are exploiting these very dynamics.

Future Implications

Common sense on recent attacks in Kenya point to al-Shabaab and its affiliated sympathizers, but this should not discount other actors.
Equally important, understanding the possibilities of who is working with extremist groups requires a realization that different types of people are involved: those possibly looking for a quick buck, those allegedly kidnapped by extremists, Kenyans not “of Somali origin,” and potentially others with varying motivations.

Without knowing the nature of the problem, Kenya can not claim to know the nature of the solution.
The GoK’s failure to present concrete evidence about who is responsible, its non-sensical and ineffective policies in response to attacks, and its politicization of investigations will further sow confusion and subsequent scapegoating among the public against blameless targets.

It is this kind of increased social anxiety and resorting to stereotyping that could exacerbate tribal and religious tensions that extremists need to legitimize their cause and violent operations.

While Uhuru should in theory rush to correct these mis-steps, security often plays second fiddle to domestic political goals.

This opinion piece was forst published in SOMALIA NEWSROOM

Filed Under: Opinion

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