Six in court as Kenya widens probe into attack on hotel complex

Six in court as Kenya widens probe into attack on hotel complex

A Canadian national and five other people suspected of helping extremist gunmen stage a deadly attack in the Kenyan capital this week have appeared in court as prosecutors investigated them for suspected terror offences.

A judge ordered five of the suspects held for 30 days while authorities look into the assault on the dusitD2 hotel complex that was carried out by al Shabab, a group that is linked to al Qaida and based in neighbouring Somalia.

Kenyan authorities say 21 people, including one police officer, were killed by the attackers, one of whom blew himself up beside a restaurant.

Kenya Attack
Kenyans walk past closed shops in the Eastleigh area of the capital (Khalil Senosi/AP)

Prosecutors suspect the alleged accomplices, including two taxi drivers and an agent for a mobile phone-based money service, of “aiding and abetting” the attackers who stormed the Nairobi complex on Tuesday afternoon and were killed by Wednesday morning, according to a court document.

Prosecutors said they were pursuing more suspects in and outside Kenya.

Suspects who appeared in court were identified as Joel Nganga Wainaina, Oliver Kanyango Muthee, Gladys Kaari Justus, Guleid Abdihakim and Osman Ibrahim.

Abdihakim is a Canadian national, according to prosecutors.

Kenya Attack
Kenyan police make a routine patrol in the Eastleigh area (Khalil Senosi/AP)

“The investigations into this matter are complex and transnational and would therefore require sufficient time and resources to uncover the entire criminal syndicate,” said Noordin Haji, director of public prosecutions.

He said he has appointed a team of prosecutors to help ensure that the investigations are “meticulous and fast-tracked”.

Police earlier identified a Kenyan military officer as the father of a suspect in the assault.

The son, Ali Salim Gichunge, as well as Violet Kemunto Omwoyo, were named as attackers in court documents.

“The attackers were in constant communications with several phone numbers which are located in Somalia,” prosecutors said.

Gichunge’s father, who is not believed to have been involved in the attack, was summoned for questioning about when he last saw his son and other details, a senior police official said.

The official said a total of 11 people were detained as part of the investigation.

The attack was denounced on Friday in Eastleigh, a Nairobi neighbourhood that is home to many ethnic Somalis and has been targeted in massive police operations against suspected extremist cells.

Kenya Attack
A unidentified relative is helped by a Red Cross worker as she grieves after visiting the mortuary in Nairobi (Ben Curtis/AP)

Al Shabab also carried out the 2013 attack at Nairobi’s nearby Westgate Mall that killed 67 people, and an assault on Kenya’s Garissa University in 2015 that claimed 147 lives, mostly students.

While US airstrikes and a multinational African Union force in Somalia have reduced the Islamic extremists’ ability to operate, al Shabab is still capable of carrying out spectacular acts of violence in retaliation for the Kenyan military’s presence in Somalia.

The attackers who stormed the hotel complex opened fire and set off grenades, sending panicked people running for cover as security forces converged.

Security camera footage released later showed a suicide bomber blowing himself up in a grassy area.

Authorities identified him as 25-year-old Mahir Khalid Riziki, who was born in the Kenyan port city of Mombasa and was sought several years ago by police for alleged extremist activities.

Kenya Attack
Kenyans walk past closed shops (Khalil Senosi/AP)

“Where are you guys?” the agitated bomber said at least a couple of times, according to Abdullahi Ogelo, the employee.

Mr Ogelo, who later concluded Riziki had been talking to his accomplices, said the man was also moving his hand over his chest.

Seconds later, the bomber detonated in a flash and billowing smoke.

In the television interview, Mr Ogelo said God saved him and gave him a “second chance”.

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