Three Guilty Over Kenya Garissa Militant Raid
Three men
have been found guilty of charges relating to the Garissa University attack in
Kenya in 2015.
Rashid
Charles Mberesero, Mohamed Ali Abikar and Hassan Edin Hassan were found guilty
of conspiracy to commit the attack in which four gunmen killed 148 people,
mainly students.
They were
also found guilty of belonging to Somalia's al-Shabab Islamist militant group.
A fourth
man, Sahal Diriye Hussein, was acquitted of the charges.
All four men
are Kenyan nationals.
The attack
was carried out by al-Shabab, a group affiliated to al-Qaeda, at the north-east
Kenyan university in April 2015.
It was the
second deadliest attack in Kenya's history, following the al-Qaeda bombing of
the US embassy in 1998, which killed over 200 people.
By attacking
young, future professionals, the massacre aimed to disrupt the country's
socio-economic growth and stability, as well as divide a multi-faith country,
analysts say.
The four
gunmen were killed at the scene and the man who plotted the attack, Mohamed
Kuno, was killed in a raid in Somalia in 2016.
Kenyan
authorities were criticised for not investigating intelligence in the
lead-up to the attack, as well as responding poorly when it occurred.
Victims of
the attack like Anastasia Mikwa still bear visible and hidden scars. The
23-year-old former Garissa University student was shot multiple times in the
attack. Despite undergoing 32 surgeries she still relies on care and support
from her parents.
Today's
judgement will offer little, if any, reprieve to victims like her and their
families.
There will,
however, be a sense of closure for a case that has dragged on for nearly four
years.
The trial
had been beset by changes of magistrates and witnesses not showing up in court;
a situation typical of the Kenyan justice system.
The ruling
today is hugely significant. This was after all the deadliest attack on Kenyan
soil since the 1998 US bombings.
The
conviction is also in some ways a victory for the Kenyan police and prosecutors
who have constantly faced accusations of botching high-profile cases like this
one.
During the
attack, gunmen fired indiscriminately as well as singling out and shooting
those who identified as Christians.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-africa-
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