HOW A MAN JOINED AND ESCAPED FROM AL-SHABAAB
A man from
Nyanza has sensationally claimed that he was tricked into joining Al-Shabaab
five years ago after being promised a job in Qatar.
The man, a
teacher, said he was employed in a private primary school but was experiencing
financial difficulties due to the low salary when a friend told him that there
were lucrative job openings in the Middle East.
The friend
put him in touch with a businessman he identified as Mr Omar Latiff, based in
Eastleigh, Nairobi, who was to make arrangements for his travel. At the time,
the father of four was also living in Eastleigh.
“They told
me that they would secure my visa and sponsor my travel to the new country,” he
told theNation in an interview on Sunday. “I was asked to provide
photocopies of my academic papers.”
On the day
they were to leave the country, the man said he was introduced to other people
who had similarly been promised various jobs in Qatar.
They were to
take a bus to Mombasa for a direct flight to Qatar.
Only after
their journey had started did he realise that Mr Latiff had not told him the
whole truth. First, they were taken to Temple Road in Nairobi where they
boarded a bus. When the bus got to Mtito Andei, some of the passengers were
asked to alight and board yet another bus.
“I started being
suspicious after we were put on the bus and given Sh20,000 each and packed
lunch,” he recalled. Instead of heading to Mombasa, they changed course and
started travelling towards Mwingi.
According to
him, some of their minders had AK-47 rifles, which they claimed they needed
because the road they would use was dangerous.
After eating
lunch at around Mwingi in Kitui County, they lost their senses, only to wake up
in a mosque in an unknown place.
HIDING IN
FEAR
The
47-year-old man, who requested not to be identified for fear of retribution but
who the Nationwill call Yusuf, said that since he escaped from
Al-Shabaab in 2012, he has been spending his days in hiding for fear of being
tracked down by people who believe he will expose their secrets.
He claimed
to have been a Christian all his life but had converted to Islam after his
church refused to bury his father in 1996. That was how he had ended up being
offered the Qatar job, though as it turned out he was being tricked into
becoming an Al-Shabaab fighter.
Although
Yusuf’s story is impossible to conclusively confirm, it points to troubling new
possibilities about the number of Kenyans being recruited into terrorism and a
strange disinterest from law enforcement in those who have returned.
There is a
strong likelihood that Yusuf is a man who has committed serious crimes,
including terrorism. At the very least, he will need to be taken through a
process of de-radicalisation and re-integration.
When the Nation
team interviewed him, he said that he and about 20 other people in his group
were finally taken to Somalia where they were given firm instructions to forget
their relatives back in Kenya.
They were
bundled into a mosque and all their electronics confiscated. Shortly after
their arrival, a man appeared and gave commands in Arabic, a language that he
did not understand.
“‘Welcome to
the land of brotherhood,’ the newcomer later said in Kiswahili. ‘Here we are
brothers. You are not allowed to do any other thing apart from what we ask
you,’” Yusuf recalled.
He was given
new sandals and an “Arafat” scarf and warned not to contact anybody outside the
mosque.
They would
later be taken through three months of training to familiarise themselves with
AK-47 rifles, rocket propelled grenades, how to deal with land mines and other
forms of military training.
“We were
paid $30 (Sh2,910) for our maintenance and were promised $75,000 (Sh7.3
million) after three months of training,” he said.
However, all
he got was the promise, never the money.
“There was
no way we could protest. Some of my colleagues who pressed the Al-Shabaab
leaders to the wall had their heads chopped off,” he said.
Yusuf
claimed that he had taken part in more than 10 missions in Burundi but none in
Kenya.
“We were
told the enemy is anything Amisom, Somali forces, Ethiopian army and any other
person believed to be a traitor to Sharia law,” he said.
Their
operations were mostly carried out at night and they spent their days in
hiding.
“We were
prohibited from taking miraa, cigarettes, alcoholic drinks and sex.”
HATCHED A
PLAN
In 2012, he
was sent on an operation inside Somalia. While on the mission, which was mainly
collecting money from rich Somalis, he and seven others in the group hatched a
plan to escape.
“The only
way was to kill our team leader whom we strangled using a wire and buried in
the sand,” he said. “We drove the car on top of his grave to conceal the
grave”.
Their
journey to freedom had began but it was not without perils.
“We had
little water and food. We killed anyone who blocked our escape and ate raw wild
game meat for survival.”
Again, they
could only travel by night and had to spend day time in hiding, mostly by lying
down on the sand, although the temperatures could easily reach 40 degrees.
According to
him, from the initial group of eight, only he and two others managed to reach
Kenya. They killed their other five colleagues or simply left them to die in
the fields after they threatened to reveal their plans to Al-Shabaab bosses.
He narrated
how the three burned their Jihadist outfits after crossing the border and
entering Kenya on November 14, 2012.
“We burnt
all the clothing and sold the guns that we had to herders in some desert in
Mandera at Sh10,000 each,” he said.
Having
walked many kilometres inside Kenyan soil, the escapees found their way to the
Dagahaley refugee camp in Dadaab where they remained for several weeks.
“I think
this was where I contracted TB,” Yusuf said of his infection, which has left
him weak. Once they felt ready to leave, they hitched a ride in the back of a
lorry that took them to Garissa town where they boarded a bus to Nairobi.
“We parted
ways at Nyamakima dressed in hijabs. I don’t know what happened to my friends
because we have never been in touch since then,” he said.
According to
him, he lived for a while with a green grocer who sheltered him for a while.
All the time, he pretended to be a woman, always dressed in a hijab.
One day, the
green grocer sent him to buy fresh supplies and he decided to use the money to
pay for his fare back to his Siaya home.
Yusuf
claimed he was willing to be integrated back to society on condition that the
government honours the amnesty it promised radicalised youths.
“There are
so many Kenyans as young as 12 years who cross the border in Wajir and Mandera
into Somalia. These are the ones that sell intelligence to the militants,” he
said. “They are trained, and heavily armed. Some are even young women.”
Yusuf
claimed he decided to escape from Al-Shabaab because he saw no point in killing
fellow Kenyans.
“I want to
start a new life because at 47, I cannot look for another job. I expect the
government to keep its word on amnesty because some of us did not get here
willingly,” he said. “Most of us are willing to leave this thing, but are we
safe?”
SOURCE: Daily Nation
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