Rental house where two terror suspects were shot dead by police on
Sunday at Nairobi’s Githurai Kimbo estate and right, a neighbour of the
two terror suspects. PHOTO/BILLY MUTAI
Daily Nation
Tuesday, May 21, 2013
The terror suspect shot dead by police on Sunday had trained in Somalia before coming back to the country.
Felix Nyangaga Otuko, a close accomplice to the
self-confessed Al-Shabaab member Elgiva Bwire, was then employed as a
cook in one of the city hotels. But after his close accomplices were
arrested, he again escaped to Somalia.
Otuko was trained in how to use a wide range of
weapons, according to detectives. When he was shot dead, police
recovered 64 assorted rounds of ammunition.
There were 45 rounds of 9 millimetre calibre,
mostly used with Ceska pistols; nine rounds of 7.62 mm special calibre
used with AK47 rifles; and .38 mm mostly used with revolvers. He could
use all these types of firearms effectively.
Though there were shots fired from within the
house, police did not recover any firearm. They suspected the couple
could have thrown the firearm out of the building, but they later combed
the nearby marshes in vain.
As the first officers entered the gate, Otuko
hurled the first grenade at them that injured five officers, including
the Githurai Kimbo police station commander. The officers resorted to
using live ammunition, but without success.
Officers from the GSU’s Recce Company were called
in to reinforce their Anti terrorism Police Unit (ATPU) counterparts.
Just before they were shot dead, he hurled three other grenades at the
officers, injuring one.
For the entire period they stayed there, the
couple never visited the salon nor a barber shop located about 10 metres
from the entrance of their house. Within a radius of about 15 metres,
there is a shop, a salon, tailoring shop, a nursery school and two
grocery shops. The couple never visited any of them.
Police on Sunday picked at least three people,
including the apartments caretaker for questioning. Detectives however
said Monday that the neighbours had very scanty information regarding
the man since they never interacted with him.
When Otuko came back to the country, he moved
together with his wife to an apartment in Githurai Kimbo where he was
among the first three tenants. They rarely interacted with people, and
the man would go to the house only once a week at night.
Otuko was working together with Elgiva Bwire alias
Mohammed Seif, Mr Omar Muchiri Athumani alias Hussein and Mr Stephen
Macharia alias Mchangoo.
When Mr Bwire was arrested in Kayole and found
with six guns, 13 grenades and 717 assorted rounds of ammunition, the
group decided to keep their arms and ammunition at different places.
On Friday, he closely monitored the case of
engaging in an organised criminal activity and being in possession of
firearms against both Athumani and Macharia when the matter came up for
hearing in court.
The other two have also been charged with causing
grievous harm to Mr Justus Makau Mulwa and Mr Patrick Ndolo Kinyingi
when they detonated a grenade at OTC bus stage on October 24, 2011. The
same month, attackers hurled a grenade at Mwaura’s Pub, injuring at
least 14 people.
The DCI boss Ndegwa Muhoro said police lost track
of the suspect when he escaped to Somali last year before he sneaked
back into the country.
The couple’s child is well, and police say she would be kept at a secret location for her safety.
When police ordered residents out of the
apartment, the two instead moved with their daughter from their one
bedroom house on the ground floor to the first floor, and lay in wait.
They even used their daughter as a human shield.
The two did not have any identification documents and the fingerprints
were taken to the Registrar of Persons. However by yesterday, police had
not received the report.
Mr Muhoro urged Kenyans to take a keener interest in the activities of their neighbours and report suspicious characters.