Wednesday, 2 October 2013

Somali Militants Mixing Business and Terror


Tyler Hicks/The New York Times
Shabab Militants Draw Money From East Africa’s Underworld: The group has profited from Illicit ivory, kidnappings, piracy ransoms, smuggled charcoal, extorted payments from aid organizations and even fake charity drives.


NAIROBI, Kenya — Illicit ivory, kidnappings, piracy ransoms, smuggled charcoal, extorted payments from aid organizations and even fake charity drives pretending to collect money for the poor — the Shabab militant group has shifted from one illegal business to another, drawing money from East Africa’s underworld to finance attacks like the recent deadly siege at a Nairobi shopping mall.
Multimedia

The New York Times
East Africa's underworld helps to support the Shabab.
Now officials here and in the West are redoubling efforts to defeat or at least contain the group — with a watchful eye on its hydra-headed sources of money — before its fighters can strike again in Kenya or even the United States.
For years, American officials have been deeply worried about the Somali militant Islamist group, which claimed responsibility for killing more than 60 men, women and children in the mall in the Sept. 21 attack. But despite comprehensive multiagency efforts to shut down its sources of money, the group still controls lucrative smuggling routes in southern Somalia, extracts protection money from Somali businesses and has raised hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of dollars abroad, part of it from the United States.
Somali elders say the Shabab employ a team of accountants — essentially white-collar militants — who have devised elaborate taxation schemes in Somalia, for instance $500 per farm per year or $2 for every sack of rice that passes through their checkpoints.
“They calculate your income, they do the math,” said Mohamed Aden, a former president of Himan and Heeb, a partially autonomous region of central Somalia near Shabab territory. “And then you have to obey. Otherwise, they kill you. That’s just how it is.”
In addition to its illicit financing activities, the group has proved adept at stealing from Islamic charities, like mosque-building projects and schools, according to several Somali elders.
But the Shabab are also known as savvy businessmen. After the group seized the port of Kismayo in southern Somalia, some car dealers as far as Mogadishu preferred importing vehicles there, instead of using the main government port, saying the Shabab ran a tighter operation with lower fees.
Though African Union forces have pushed the group out of Kismayo, its fighters still control the sandy hinterland around the port, and Somali elders say it continues to tax items like T-shirts, sugar and soap.
“They have a diversified income stream,” said Jonathan Schanzer, the vice president for research at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and a former counter-terrorism official at the United States Treasury. “Sort of a perfect cocktail that created this nightmare scenario.”
Somalia’s perennial chaos makes the Shabab’s tendrils even harder to remove. Militant groups around the world dabble in the felonious, but the long history of anarchy in Somalia, whose central government imploded in 1991, creates the ideal environment for war profiteers.
Shabab militants are able to extract extortion fees, kidnap Western aid workers along the Kenyan border, collude with Indian Ocean pirates and then retreat to their strongholds with no worries about being arrested or prosecuted because law enforcement is virtually nonexistent in Somalia.
The country’s extreme poverty is another complicating factor. When the United States designated the Shabab a terrorist organization in 2008, setting off sanctions on material support for the group, aid agencies complained bitterly that the American rules were making it impossible to distribute lifesaving aid in Shabab-controlled areas. The American government relaxed the enforcement of some of these rules in 2011, when a famine swept through southern Somalia, to ensure that assistance got to the millions of Somalis who needed it.
While the Shabab control far less territory than they did a few years ago, many people in this region remain terrified of their network of assassins and their continued ability to stage large-scale attacks on civilians, like the massacre in the Kenyan mall or a suicide bombing in Uganda in 2010 that killed scores of people. And as the Shabab transform themselves from a guerrilla movement that once aspired to rule Somalia and fielded a large army of young fighters (Shabab means “youth” in Arabic) to a leaner and more mobile terrorist organization, their costs will go down.
Mr. Schanzer said the attack on the Nairobi mall probably cost the group “close to $100,000,” calculating the price of the automatic rifles, bullets and grenades that were used, along with training costs and possibly rent for a store in the mall that investigators suspect may have been used as a weapon depot before the attack.

Over the weekend, Kenya’s major newspapers reported that the country’s intelligence services had information about a potential strike on the mall but failed to act. American officials said that the warning had been based on fragmentary information and that they had no “actionable” or specific intelligence about the attack.
Many analysts had long believed that Nairobi might be spared because it is one of the Shabab’s logistical hubs, with the Somali enclave of Eastleigh serving as the financial capital for the group.
“That’s where the money transaction companies are,” said Ken Menkhaus, a professor of political science at Davidson College. “That’s where business can be done undetected.”
Mr. Menkhaus said Eastleigh also served as a center for recruitment and fund-raising, and was even used by Shabab fighters looking for a place to recuperate after being wounded on Somalia’s battlefields.
Just about all of the institutions in Somalia collapsed under the weight of 20 years of anarchy, including the banking sector, giving rise to a lightly regulated money transfer business. Western officials have struggled with how to prevent the estimated $1.3 billion per year that flows into Somalia, often from small storefronts in London or Minneapolis, from reaching militant groups without punishing the countless Somalis who rely upon these remittances to survive.
In May, two Minnesota women, both naturalized American citizens from Somalia, were sentenced for providing material support to the Shabab after going door to door with others to raise money for the group, often pretending the donations were for the poor.
A United Nations investigative team reported this summer that Somali businessmen in Qatar had raised money and wired it, using a money transfer service, to a Shabab hit squad to finance “a wave of assassinations.”
The British bank Barclays, one of the few to work with the Somali money transfer companies, has begun severing ties with them, fearing that it could run afoul of laws meant to stem terrorist financing.
President Hassan Sheik Mohamud of Somalia said in an interview that his country desperately needed to replace its informal money transfer business with a proper banking sector, but that it needed more time. The sudden shutdown of financial transfers could be disastrous, he said, especially now, when Somalia is struggling to recover from years of chaos and needs infusions of investment to keep the momentum going.
If anti-Shabab measures are too broad, Mr. Mohamud said, they could backfire. For instance, cutting off the ability of Somali expatriates to send back money to relatives could make many people poorer and drive more jobless, disillusioned youths into the Shabab’s ranks to earn cash to support themselves.
“We need to break that vicious circle of generations losing hope,” Mr. Mohamud said.
As long as large areas of Somalia remain violent and ungoverned, as they do today, the Shabab will have plenty of opportunities to do business. The group has cashed in on the Chinese demand for illicit elephant ivory, training fighters to sneak across the Kenyan border and slaughter elephants for their tusks, businessmen in Kismayo say. Shabab fighters have also extorted access fees from some aid groups, Somali elders say, often getting tens of thousands of dollars to allow humanitarian aid to be distributed in their zones.
But perhaps nothing has been more lucrative for the Shabab than the underground charcoal trade. Known as black gold, the charcoal made from burning Somalia’s acacia forests is highly prized in the Arabian Peninsula. Exporting charcoal was banned under the dictatorship of President Mohammed Siad Barre, but it roared back to life in the chaos that followed his ouster in 1991.
Before Kenyan forces captured Kismayo, the charcoal trade earned the Shabab more than $25 million a year, according to United Nations investigators. The loss of Kismayo was a huge setback for the Shabab, and the United Nations Security Council passed a resolution last year banning imports of Somali charcoal.
But the Shabab have shifted the business to other ports still under their control, continuing to export millions of sacks of charcoal per year.
“They have less money, but they don’t need a lot of money,” Mr. Menkhaus said. “You can still do an awful lot of damage with not that much money.”
[http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/01/world/africa/officials-struggle-with-tangled-web-of-financing-for-somali-militants.html?pagewanted=1&_r=0&nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20131001]







www.iactts.com

President Kenyatta orders inquiry into mall terror attack



Amid emerging hard questions over Security agencies' response to the Westgate mall attack, President Uhuru Kenyatta now says a Commission of Inquiry will be established to probe possible lapses. President Kenyatta who was among those who attended prayers in Nairobi in memory of victims of the attack, reiterated that Kenyan forces would only leave Somalia once the job is done.

In Summary

  • The President did not indicate when the commission would be set up and its membership
  • Meanwhile, the UK High Commission spokesman John Bradshaw on Tuesday discounted reports that foreign experts had been barred from collecting crucial evidence
President Kenyatta on Tuesday ordered the establishment of a commission of inquiry to investigate the Westgate Mall terror attack.
At the same time, eight body bags were delivered to the City Mortuary from the ruined mall. The number of those missing has also been revised to 28, although no official announcement has been made.
The commission, the President said, would seek to address the security lapses that could have led to the terror attack even as he maintained that Kenya Defence Forces would not pull out of Somalia.
The President, who was speaking at the Kenyatta International Conference Centre during an Inter-Religious Council prayer service for the victims of the attack, did not indicate when the commission would be set up and its membership.
It will likely seek to establish whether National Intelligence Service reports had warned that Al-Qaeda-linked Al-Shabaab terror group planned to attack Kenya and if adequate measures were put in place to prevent it.
Interior Cabinet Secretary Joseph ole Lenku has declined to respond to the allegations, saying intelligence matters could not be discussed in public.
Other claims include that elite squads of the GSU and the military which responded to the attack did not have a common assault plan resulting to fatalities from friendly fire.
The collapse of a section of the mall and reports of looting have also placed the military on the spot.
IN FOR THE LONG HAUL
A tough-talking President Kenyatta said terror attacks would not deter the country’s efforts to stabilise Somalia, adding that KDF was in the war-torn country for the long haul.
Al-Shabaab has demanded that Kenya withdraws its forces of face more terror attacks. “I want to be categorically clear; we will stay there (in Somalia) until they bring order to their nation. We will not be intimidated. We will not be cowed. If their desire is for Kenya to pull out of Somalia, all they need to do is what they should have done 20 years ago which is put their house in order and we shall come back,” said the President amidst applause.
As he spoke, forensic teams recovered more bodies. It is not clear whether the eight bags taken to the mortuary contained different victims.
Earlier reports said three bodies were taken out of the rubble. One was thought to be that of a KDF soldier because of the remains of his uniform and a G-3 rifle similar to those issued to soldiers deployed at the mall. It was taken away at around 1pm in a military ambulance.
Meanwhile, the UK High Commission spokesman John Bradshaw on Tuesday discounted reports that foreign experts had been barred from collecting crucial evidence.
“None of this is correct. The relationship between the UK Metropolitan Police and the Kenyan CID is excellent,” Mr Bradshaw said.
An official at the American embassy also discounted claims that US experts had been barred from accessing crucial information.
[http://www.nation.co.ke/news/Uhuru-orders-probe-into-Westgate-attack/-/1056/2015316/-/12cct95/-/index.html]








www.iactts.com

SA down plays terror threat over 'Samantha Lewthwaite's visit'

South African Defense Minister Nosiviwe Mapisa Nqakula on Tuesday downplayed terror threats

A photo of a fake South African passport of Samantha Lewthwaite released by Kenyan police in December 2011.. There has been serious speculation that Samantha, known as Dada Mzungu (White Sister) by the Al-Shabaab and nicknamed The White Widow by the British press, could have been the ringleader and mastermind of the Westgate Mall massacre. PHOTO/FILE.

CAPE TOWN
South African Defence Minister Nosiviwe Mapisa Nqakula on Tuesday downplayed terror threats against her country as "insignificant".
While the country is not immune to terrorist attacks, the security cluster remains vigilant, the minister said. She made the remarks amid press reports that South Africa had been placed on terror alert following Westgate Mall attack in Kenya last month, in which nearly 70 people were killed.
Samantha Lewthwaite, a British woman dubbed the "White Widow", was reportedly seen in South Africa earlier this year conducting surveillance on foreign embassies in Pretoria.
Lewthwaite, who was holding a false South African passport, was believed to be the mastermind behind the Kenya attack.
South Africa is also facing threats from M23 rebels in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) where South Africa has deployed troops as part of the United Nations intervention force in that region.
NO TURNING BACK
Referring to such threats, Nqakula said South Africa will not be deterred from continuing to deploy military forces where necessary on the continent.
"As SA we have done well, we should continue to do what we believe is right, and continue to intervene, I believe the intervention in DRC is benefit not only to DRC and region but to SA as well," Nqakula said.
In a related development, the ruling African National Congress (ANC) has called for tightening immigration laws and stronger security measures on identity documents (IDs) and passports.
[http://mobile.nation.co.ke/News/South-Africa-downplays-terror-threat-over-Samantha-Lewthwaite/-/1950946/2014646/-/format/xhtml/-/wbos9uz/-/index.html]







www.iactts.com

Why do terror groups use social media?


Al-Shabab’s use of Twitter during a stand-off at a Nairobi mall may have been motivated by a desire for publicity, but could also be a means to recruit new members and raise funds, experts say.

Kenya's police force had been on Twitter just four days when gunmen entered the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi armed with grenades and automatic weapons.
Officials wasted no time putting the platform to use, relaying updates about the attack, asking witnesses to come forward and encouraging citizens to donate blood.
At almost exactly the same time -- most likely in Somalia -- al-Shabab militants were also using the social media site to claim responsibility for the attack and release details about it.
The account was quickly shut down as Twitter executives enforced their guidelines blocking “unlawful or illegal” activities. It was at least the third time in less than a year an account run by al-Shabab operatives had been set up and forcibly shut down.
Collecting information: A tweet sent by Kenya's police chief David Kimaiyo during the Westgate siege

Good morning, we are still held up at Westgate. Kindly share information of the families who have been shopping and have not been traced.

RECRUITMENT, FUNDRAISING AND INFORMATION CONTROL
David Malet, international security specialist at the University of Melbourne, says experts have known about al-Shabab’s social media presence for at least two years.
“[al-Shabab] consider it a cornerstone of their strategy to try to reach out to youth in western countries,” he says.
Dr Malet believes the main motivation for their online presence is recruitment, and their target is young westerners.
“They’re trying to reach millennials, they’re trying to reach teenagers who they think might be active on social media sites who might not be familiar with the politics behind al-Shabab,” he says.  
“If they can reach them [and] convince them of some noble cause out there that they’re fighting for… then they can persuade people to come join the cause.”
LISTEN: Click the orange play button below to hear an extended interview with Jake Wallis

Whether the approach actually boosts numbers for the group is “difficult to say,” he adds.
“There’s been some evidence of a few westerners who have joined al-Shabab, who have joined al-Qaeda because they’ve been in internet chatrooms or somebody has groomed them or recruited them, but for the most part recruitment among westerners has taken place face-to-face at community centres or mosques,” he says.
Information specialist Jake Wallis from Charles Sturt University says in the Westgate example, control over how the group is portrayed is also a key factor.
“The Kenyan authorities were using social media platforms such as Twitter to assert their control over the situation, and almost in real time, al-Shabab was able to generate a counter-narrative that asserted its position within the conflict,” he says.
“This is really important in terms of reaching out to that potential audience, in terms of recruitment and financial support.”
SHOULD ONLINE EXTREMISTS BE SHUT DOWN?
Most social media sites, including Twitter, allow anonymous users to set up accounts and run them however they like – until they break the rules.
Al-Shabab was able to continue running new Twitter accounts despite being continually shut down; a point that highlights the difficulty a company that hosts 200 million users worldwide has in policing its entire user base.
It also poses the question: can extremists ever be completely shut down?  
Jake Wallis says probably not.
“It’s a significant problem for the platforms that are becoming the de-facto media environment in a digital age,” he says.
“What’s happening is platforms like Twitter, like Facebook, like YouTube, are having to make decisions about what constitutes acceptable engagement with a global audience, and in many ways engagement with a democratic political process.”
On the other hand, a social media presence can help authorities and experts understand and collect information about extremists and their movements, a fact that came to light through the PRISM project made famous by the leaks of Edward Snowden.
“Many of the digital gateways that we use on a regular basis, like Facebook, like Twitter, are supplying whole data sets to agencies who can then sift through that information and put together a picture of the kinds of relational networks that individuals considered security risks are engaged in,” says Mr Wallis.

[http://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/2013/10/02/why-do-terror-groups-use-social-media]







www.iactts.com

Appeal rejected for extremists who planned attack on army base

Wissam mahmoud Fattal
Wissam Mahmoud Fattal after being sentenced for terrorism. Inset: Saney Awys and Nayev El Sayed. Min Picture: Araon Francis Source: Herald Sun
Share on email
THREE Islamic extremists who planned to massacre Australian soldiers in a terrorist attack on a Sydney army base have lost their bid to overturn their convictions and 18-year jail terms.
Wissam Mahmoud Fattal, 37, Saney Edow Aweys, 30, and Nayef El Sayed, 29, today had their appeal rejected in the Victorian Court of Appeal.
The trio planned to shoot as many soldiers as possible at Holsworthy Army Base to advance the cause of Islam, which they believed was under attack from the West.
They were jailed in 2011 for 18 years with a non-parole period of 13-and-a-half years.
The men were found to be planning the attack between February and August 2009.
The Crown had counter appealed against the leniency of the sentences but that was also dismissed.
Each of the men's failed appeals relied on claims that sentencing judge Justice Betty King erred in her directions to the jury, and that a build-up of errors caused a miscarriage of justice.
Justices Geoffrey Nettle, Peter Buchanan and Pamela Tate unanimously rejected the grounds of appeal.
The Director of Public Prosecutions also criticised Justice King's sentence as inadequate for a plot which it said could have had devastating consequences.
“Her Honour arrived at an inadequate sentence by focusing on the steps taken and giving insufficient weight to the nature of the plan which could have had devastating consequences, involving as it did a planned attack on a selected target with the intention of killing as many soldiers and others found there as possible,” the DPP submitted.
The DPP argued the offending fell into the worst class and the men should have been punished with life in jail.
But the justices said the trio could not be sentenced as if the terror plot had actually been carried out.
They also noted that extremists prepared to commit attacks which involve suicide as a form of martyrdom were unlikely be deterred by harsh prison sentences.
“In our view the sentences imposed were severe but quite properly so,” the justices said.
“We consider that the maximum penalty ought to be reserved for the worst class of case.
“The offending here, regrettably, was not of the worst class.”
[http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/nation/appeal-rejected-for-extremists-who-planned-attack-on-army-base/story-e6frg6nf-1226731394346?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+TheAustralianNewsNDM+%28The+Australian+%7C+News+%7C%29]







www.iactts.com

Tuesday, 1 October 2013

Preventing Kidnappings by Noel Whelan M.A. Director of Training, IACTTS








www.iactts.com

How the Nairobi attack has shaken Kenya's Indians


People of the Jain community hold candles during a 24 hour prayer session for the victims of the Westgate Shopping Centre attack on September 29, 2013 in Nairobi, Kenya.Tens of thousands of people of Indian origin live in Kenya
Some 67 people were killed and many injured after al-Shabab militants attacked the Westgate centre in Kenya on 21 September. A number of those killed were people of South Asian origin. The BBC Hindi's Nitin Srivastava reports from Nairobi.
A packed weekend for Nehal Vekaria had begun with a cooking competition at the upscale Westgate shopping centre in a posh part of Nairobi, favoured by the expatriates.
On Sunday, 22 September, the 16-year-old daughter of Indian immigrants planned to go to her school for a ceremony in which she was to be chosen as the deputy head girl.
When the militants stormed into the mall on Saturday and began firing indiscriminately, Nehal called up her father and told him that she, along with a friend, were hiding on the rooftop.
That was her last call.

Nehal Vekaria
Nehal Vekaria was killed in the attack
Repeated attempts by her parents to contact Nehal failed. After six hours, her father received a call from a Nairobi hospital asking the family to come and identify her body.
"When I dropped her at Westgate in the morning, she promised to be back home soon. It never happened. She was such a bright student and wanted to pursue accountancy as a career," says Parbat Vekaria, her father.


Nehal was among an estimated 15 people of Indian origin living in Kenya who were killed in the attack. Four Indian citizens working in Kenya were also killed.
A substantial number of more than 90,000 people of South Asian origin living in Kenya are Indians, and they wield considerable political and economic power.
Many of them arrived here in the early 19th Century. They worked as traders, farmers and on the railway system that the British were building in east Africa.
Today, Indians living here are mainly engaged in construction, metal and retail businesses. Some work in banks. They also own vast tracts of farmland in the countryside.
But the attack on the shopping centre has shaken them.
"There is considerable fear among people, especially of Kenyan Asian origin as more than 20% of the shops in Westgate were owned by Indians," says 56-year-old Bahadur Janmuhad Amlani from India's Gujarat state. He migrated to Kenya in 1992 to start a business.
"People are afraid to come out of their homes. Even my business of selling household Indian goods has taken a hit. But things will get back to normal soon."
Chetna Pathak, a homemaker who lives in Nairobi's Parklands area next to Westgate, says she heard the sound of gunfire from the shopping centre for three days.
Ms Pathak says though people of Indian origin are apprehensive after the attack, they are "inseparable from the Kenyan social fabric".
"I don't believe that only Indians or any community was singled out by the attackers. And even if they were and even if they are shaken, we are as much a part of this society as any other Kenyan," she says.


Meanwhile, authorities in Kenya have been quick to realise that the Westgate attack may affect the morale of the hundreds of thousands of foreigners in Kenya.

Bahadur Janmuhad Amlani
Mr Amlani says there is "considerable fear" in the Indian community
Former prime minister Raila Odinga was the first to react after the attack in which people of several nationalities died.
"There is an attempt to divide Kenyans along religious lines. We are bound to be united irrespective of religious differences and no such attempt to divide will be successful," Mr Odinga said a day after the attack.
Kenya's Interior Minister Joseph Ole Lenku has assured that Kenyan Asians or other communities are "as safe in this country as anywhere else in the world".
Muljibhai Pindolia, president of the Kenyan Hindu Organisation, says the attack is "a terrible loss not only for business but for all those who have lost their lives".
"The government has to beef up security, not only for us but for every Kenyan."
[http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-india-24327554?ocid=socialflow_twitter_bbcworld]






www.iactts.com