Tuesday, October 5, 2010
German detained in Kenya on terror suspicion-report
BERLIN Oct 5 (Reuters) - A German citizen has been detained in Kenya on suspicion that he was planning to join Somali allies of al Qaeda, al Shabaab, a German newspaper reported on Tuesday.
A Kenyan official said an anti-terrorism unit had detained a man in the coastal resort town of Mombasa and arranged for him to be deported to Germany.
The Foreign Ministry in Berlin confirmed on Tuesday that a German citizen had been detained by Kenyan authorities. It declined to provide any further details.
The Berlin newspaper Der Tagesspiegel reported the German man arrived in Mombasa as a tourist on Sep. 22.
The newspaper said Kenyan security officials launched a nationwide search for him after German authorities passed along a letter the man wrote to his mother saying he would never return alive. He was detained several days ago, the daily said.
Kenyan officials said a suspect had been arrested at an entertainment spot on the outskirts of Mombasa. The city has in the past been hit by al Qaeda-linked attacks.
"He was in police custody since his arrest on Saturday," Mwanza Katee, district commissioner for Kilifi, where the suspect was arrested.
An "anti-terrorism police unit has been in Mombasa and took the suspect and made arrangements for his immediate deportation. On Monday morning he was handed over to Interpol and back to Germany."
German officials were sure the 23year old German convert Sascha B. was about to join the Somali terror group Al-Shabaab in its Jihad against African Union Troops. They contacted the German Embassy in Kenya, who then gave information about the suspected terror recruit to Kenyan security forces.
Sascha B. had left Germany via Frankfurt Airport and travelled to Mombasa, Kenya, on September 22th.
Back home Germany B.´s mother found a note left by her son saying he would „never return alive“.
Manhunt started for the blue-eyes White Muslim who was about to make the journey from Kenya´s coastal town of Mombasa, crossing the border into violent Somalia – route commonly used foreign militants recruited by Al Shabaab.
A few days ago Sascha B.´s journey into the world of Jihad ended, when Kenyan police arrested the 23year-old in a private apartment in Mtwapa, outside of Mombasa. B. was then deported to Germany where he remains in custody.
European fighters are a known phenomenon among Al Shabaab Islamists in Somalia. Several dozen men, most of them ethnic Somalis, from Scandinavia, Britain, France, Belgium and Netherlands have joined the radical extremists in recent months. Some even carried out suicide bombings.
Just two weeks ago a Danish-Somali man from Copenhagen attacked Mogadishu´s airport in a suicidal assault.
Only about three to five Islamists from Germany´s Somali-Community (which numbers around 5,000) are suspected of having joined Al-Shabaab. German intelligence says the terrorist-potential of Somalia has been recognized as a growing security threat to Europe. While North Waziristan is in the focus of the media and intelligence agencies, Somalia has become a vital training ground for a new generation of Western terror recruits.
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