How police got hold of the sh 370M ivory smuggler
A Nakumatt
supermarket receipt left at a house in Mombasa’s Nyali estate led to the arrest
of the main suspect behind the Sh370 million ivory haul seized in Singapore
last month.
The
Tanzanian, Mr Said Juma Said, who uses multiple names and has both Kenyan and
Tanzanian ID papers, had rented the house where detectives believe the initial
consignment of tea was replaced with ivory.
An X-ray of
the container done in Thailand showed that the ivory was put into the containers
after their bottoms were cut. Mr Said, according to the detectives,
was assisted by Mr Nicholas Mweri Jefwa, a former employee of Siginon Freight
who is still on the run.
When the
investigating team raided the house, they recovered a number of items including
ivory chips, an electric cutter and the receipt.
They
established that the receipt was issued by Nakumatt’s Likoni branch, where a
purchase was done using a Nakumatt Smart card registered in the name of Sheikh
Mahmoud Abdulrahaman.
It was then
that other details on him, including his Kenyan ID number, telephone number and
Tanzanian passport number were obtained.
The
Immigration department, however, later confirmed that the passport and the
photos belonged to Mr Said Juma Said, who also used the name Abdulrahaman
Mahmoud Sheikh, the main suspect.
IVORY
CHIPS
He had travelled to Nairobi, Mombasa and through the Lunga Lunga border point. The same telephone line had been used to register access to ports on August 1, 2014 for a period of two years.
He had travelled to Nairobi, Mombasa and through the Lunga Lunga border point. The same telephone line had been used to register access to ports on August 1, 2014 for a period of two years.
Some of the
ivory is believed to have been brought from Tanzania on February 17. According to
an entry permit dated the same day, a Tanzanian-registered vehicle that
allegedly delivered pineapples to Kongowea could have been used to transport
the ivory haul.
Mr Said is
also said to own a fleet of cars and a four-storey building in in Majengo.
In Tanzania, he is the director of a family company, Funzi Island, and is also believed to operate a transport company.
In Tanzania, he is the director of a family company, Funzi Island, and is also believed to operate a transport company.
On Friday,
Inspector-General of Police Joseph Boinnet said the ivory chips and electric
cutter were taken to the Kenya Wildlife Service laboratory for analysis.
The
detectives have also established the movements of the containers prior to the
seizure. According to the police, container FCIU5235796, which was seized in
Thailand left Mombasa on April 6 while container FCIU5085401, found in Singapore,
left Mombasa on April 19.
TEA FOR
EXPORT
It all
started in September last year when Mr Jefwa contacted Almasi Chai (K)
Ltd to procure 66 tonnes of tea for export in six batches of 11 tonnes.
On March 19
this year, Mr Jefwa approached Rais Shipping Services (K) Ltd to export the
consignment. The forwarding agent was indicated as Siginon Freight and the
consignee was Keshav Trader, Dubai.
On March 20,
a driver identified as Kenneth Njuguna Mwangi picked up a 20-feet
container and drove it to the yard of the transporter for an overnight
stay.
The
following day, he drove the truck to the Siginon Freight warehouse for loading
and left at 1pm for the port, a short distance of less than 3km. The truck and
the container, however, reached port two days later.
It is
believed that it was during this time that the bottoms were cut out and the
ivory inserted.
Three
Siginon Freight employees who have been arrested were accused of releasing the
containers before ensuring that the customs entries had been generated and
failing to provide security to escort the cargo.
Three Kenya
Revenue Authority officers who supervised the loading on March 21 are also in
custody.
SOURCE: Nairobi News
SOURCE: Nairobi News
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