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AL-SHABAAB

Norwegian cleared of al-Shabaab Kenya attack

A Norwegian-Somali arrested in Kenya in connection with two bloody Al-Shabaab massacres has been released after Nairobi police determined there was insufficient evidence against him.

Norwegian cleared of al-Shabaab Kenya attack
Bodies of some of victims killed in an al-Shabaab attack on a quarry in Mandera. Photo: EPA / DANIEL IRUNGU
Mohamud Jamal, 40, told Norway’s NRK that he had been on holiday in Nanyuki, near the Somali border, when he was arrested for reasons “beyond comprehension”.  
 
“They never said a word about exactly why I was arrested,” Jamal told NRK. “I'm a bit angry, because I went through hell there. It is unfair. They have taken the wrong person and they could at least have said sorry. But I am glad that I am free.” 
 
Jamal was one of six Somalis on trial in Nairobi last week for their alleged role in carrying out two massacres. 
 
Al-Shabaab terrorists stormed a bus in Mandera, north-east Kenya, in November last year, executing everyone who could not cite verses from the Koran. 
 
Two weeks later, they attacked a quarry in the same region, killing the 36 workers they surprised while they slept.
 
Jamal said that his Kenyan police interrogator has realised he had not been involved in the attacks as soon as he was sent to Nairobi from Nanyuki, the town where he was first arrested. 
 
“After a while, the person that interrogated me said that I really should not have been arrested. He said it would work out,” he said. 
 
The Norwegian citizen was in prison for more than a week before he was released on Friday. 
 
"The lawyer told the police that they had nothing on me and on Friday afternoon a policeman said to me: 'Now you are exonerated and you can leave whenever you want'". 
 
“We are aware that he has been released after a decision by the Kenyan authorities,” Eskil Sivertsen from the Norwegian Foreign Ministry told NRK. “The embassy in Nairobi has assisted in the usual way.” 
 

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TERRORISM

Swedes joining rebels can ‘rarely be stopped’

A Säpo official has suggested Sweden is powerless to stop citizens from joining Islamist rebels in Syria even though there is a risk they will return to commit acts of terror in Sweden.

Swedes joining rebels can 'rarely be stopped'

At least 30 Swedish citizens have travelled to Syria to fight against Assad’s regime.

“We can rarely stop them,” Jonathan Peste, chief analyst at Swedish security service Säpo, told Sveriges Radio (SR) on Monday.

According to Peste, the Swedish citizens who have joined rebel forces in Syria are dangerous individuals.

“In Syria they are dangerous. Some have committed attacks against civilians,” he claimed.

“What we are concerned about is the experiences they receive over there. They increase their ability to commit acts of violence. Many return to Sweden and, according to al-Qaida’s ideology, Europe and even Sweden are legitimate targets,” said Peste.

He claimed that there are known examples of individuals who have planned to attack Sweden.

Among the Swedes who have gone to Syria, some, said Peste, “have been part of this violence-endorsing Islamist, or al-Qaida-inspired, environment for quite some time.”

Others are completely new to those environments and have gone to Syria after witnessing from afar the atrocities that are happening there.

“This isn’t actually anything new,” said Peste.

“We have seen others travel to Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia and Yemen for example. What’s worrying about Syria is that quite many have gone there, at least around 30.”

Asked whether Säpo stands a chance of stopping them from going, Peste said “very rarely”.

Explaining Säpo’s methods of preventing or delaying such journeys, Peste said:

“We look them up and try to talk to them. We tell them it is dangerous to go and that we cannot help them if someone catches them. But then they don’t have to meet with us if they don’t want to.”

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