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Archive for January 7th, 2010

Economic refugees flood the rich nations: Slave trade booms as poverty bites

Posted by African Press International on January 7, 2010

Human traffickers prefer crowded areas like Eastleigh in Nairobi to carry out their crime, while anti human trafficking activist Amina Kinsi (above), founder of Ngazi Moja Foundation in Eastleigh, fights the crime with the only weapons at her disposal. Photo/ ABDULLAHI JAMAA

Human traffickers prefer crowded areas like Eastleigh in Nairobi to carry out their crime, while anti human trafficking activist Amina Kinsi (above), founder of Ngazi Moja Foundation, fights the crime with the only weapons at her disposal. Photo/ ABDULLAHI JAMAA

By ABDULLAHI JAMAA Posted Wednesday, January 6 2010 at 18:21

A group of young are gathered behind a makeshift structure where they have been living on edge. They have been sitting idle for the some hours. Their discussion returns to poverty, and how to overcome it. Sweats are beading on their worried foreheads.

Indeed, if there is a poverty-stricken place near Garissa Town, it is Bulla Masalani Village. The sun sets gently, leaving a cloudless sky and the first hints of cool air begin to blow through the thatched houses that make most homes.

“The sun rises everyday and it sets everyday, and like that sun, poverty rises here everyday, making us a lost generation,” says a 20-year-old youth we shall call Sheikh.

Seek asylum

“The only option now is to move out of this county and seek asylum.” For months Sheikh has been weighing the possibility of making the long journey to Africa’s biggest economy: South Africa. “We know that the journey is dangerous, but I cannot allow myself to be consumed by poverty. I better die elsewhere.

“We cannot further our education here, we cannot do business, we cannot get meals, so why should we stay in this horrible condition,” he asks the man who completed secondary school two years ago. He has borrowed the money required for the voyage South, now he has only few weeks the journey with human traffickers this month.

“Many friends and relatives have already gone, some died on the way and others are surviving. The one important thing is to run away from Kenya,” he says. Human trafficking business in the North Eastern region is getting bolder with every passing day.

“Of course we will have to seek better life elsewhere. We are concerned. Living conditions are getting worse by the day” says, Ahmed 19. Human traffickers have established a strong network to make money from those who are fleeing the sheer crumbling economy and the shocking unemployment that has ravaged most of Kenyan youth.

And here in the North, the scale of human trafficking is alarming. “Trafficking of people is very rampant here. It is a multi-million dollar business that is getting bold in much of the Great lakes and Horn of Africa region,” says Mr Abdullahi Hirsi, the executive director of Northern Heritage, a local aid agency in Garissa.

“In the past few years alone, because of droughts, we have seen a huge number of economic refugees targeted by human traffickers with a promise of better life elsewhere,” he said. A spot-check in Garissa, Wajir and Mandera shows that the illegal business is conducted daily, final arrangements done in Nairobi.

“In Garissa, at least five persons are trafficked in each of the more than 10 buses plying the route to Nairobi. You can imagine the number of people on sale everyday — more than 50,” says an anti-trafficking activist who sought anonymity due to security reasons. “This depicts a completely worrying picture.”

Nairobi’s’ Eastleigh has been the hub of the internationally denounced trade. Economic and conflict refugees from Somalia, Ethiopia, Eritrea and Kenya are sold in the sprawling commercial centre to move to other countries. “Eastleigh is a connection point for most victims. It is where the journey starts and it is where most monies exchange hands,” says Amina Kinsi of Ngazi Moja Foundation, a lobby group in Eastleigh.

According to a recent report released by US State Department in June 2009, Kenya is a source, transit and a destination country for men, women and children trafficked for the purpose of better lives, forced labour and sexual exploitation. Victims take tedious routes to South Africa and sometimes to some European countries. Traffickers make millions of dollars every month by arranging and directing the journey to South Africa. Some victims end their travels with shocking deaths.

The cheapest illegal migration goes well over $600 while the most expensive takes more than $2,000 for a journey that sometimes takes several months. “Sometimes, you become stranded in a town where you know no one. I spent more than a week in Zambia as I had run out of cash,” said Farah, who returned from South Africa at the height of Xenophobia against Somalis.

“I reached Johannesburg after more than three weeks of journeying. It was the worst journey ever for me.” The cartel of human traffickers usually collect per-head fee at every entry point of these countries. “Traffickers use unmanned border towns, often meeting with little police and security restrictions,” says Mr Hirsi of Northern Heritage.

Some of this money is usually meant to pay kickbacks to Immigration officials and border police. “We travelled in group of about 10. At every point we paid about $100. If you don’t have enough money, you are left alone and you may get lost. That could mean losing your money or even your life,” says Farah.

The International Organization for Migration says women and girls are vulnerable to sexual abuse including rapes by even their own traffickers. Corruption among public officers has made life easy for benefiting from the sale of stricken villagers. Anti-trafficking NGOs in North Eastern say corrupt police officers are part and parcel of the business. Intelligence officers in the province agree. The authorities are incapable of changing things to stop the slave trade.

However, the North Eastern PC James Ole Serian says the government is making efforts to investigate and prosecute officials suspected of involvement. “We are having names of about seven individuals allegedly taking part in the illegal trade of selling people. We are investigating their case and we will obviously arraign them in court,” he says.

Pressure groups are saying that bus companies from the region to the capital Nairobi traffic even young children. “Bus conductors and some police officers on major roadblocks are major players,” says an activist. But as public transport gets tough for those involved in the business, the provincial authorities say these thieves have now resorted to more unlikely means.

Over the past few months, boats and dhows have been used to transport victims across River Tana. More are reportedly using government vehicles that are not searched by police.

Groups campaigning

Groups campaigning against the illegal trade are worried that trafficking industry continues to be a profitable one in much of the Horn, but there is misery involved. An assessment carried out by the International Organization for Migration in the target regions of Kenya establishes poverty and the search for livelihood as key factors that render people vulnerable to trafficking.

Over the years, trafficking has grown a well organised crime that operates on a global scale, with an estimated trade value of $32 billion a year. Lack of global action and accords to prevent the trade is one key problem.

“In Kenya for instance, there are no immediate laws that can be used to address this problems. Some laws and amendments are urgently needed to stop the vice,” says Mr Hirsi. “You can realise the state of our lives. We are seeing traffickers are making money from people like us but we have accepted ourselves to be trafficked just to reach greener pastures,” Sheikh finally says.

source.nation.ke

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Horrifying human beings: These men’s criminal activities soured an otherwise calm Kenyan existence

Posted by African Press International on January 7, 2010

Godfrey Matheri (The Naivasha Vampire) was not your conventional criminal, nor was he the kind that makes it to the police list of ‘the most wanted’. He was simply ‘The Naivasha Vampire’, the man who lured women to his house, raped them, cut their veins and sucked their blood.

Godfrey Matheri (The Naivasha Vampire) was not your conventional criminal, nor was he the kind that makes it to the police list of ‘the most wanted’. He was simply ‘The Naivasha Vampire’, the man who lured women to his house, raped them, cut their veins and sucked their blood.

By  DOMINIC WABALA and FRED MUKINDA

In Summary

  • Kenya bids goodbye to the last decade with a deep sigh of relief, knowing that 2010 starts without these outlaws roaming the streets

At the height of their fight against crime in 2005, police in Kenya profiled what they referred to as members of a gang of criminals with international links across the region.

The mob was reportedly involved in bank robberies, murders, carjackings and cash-in-transit heists.

While some members of the gang are reported to have been killed in either Kenya or Tanzania, others remain at large — almost five years after they were placed on the Kenya Police’s Most Wanted list.

They include Jackson Irungu Mwangi alias Jack, Silas Mugendi Njeru alias Patrick Irungu, Godfrey Mulwa Kitheka alias Ngilu, Evans Mathyaka Mue alias Walter Musyoka Mue alias Kijana, Samuel Gitau Saitoti alias Simo, Peter Mutua Kainde and Wafula Muyela.

Another group of Kenyan criminals was arrested in Mozambique in December 2005 while reportedly planning a robbery.

The 10 were airlifted to Dar-es-Salaam under Kenyan and Tanzanian police escort aboard a Mozambican military plane before being handed over to Tanzanian authorities.

They were convicted of robbing a Moshi-based forex bureau of Tsh44 million and the National Bank of Commerce, Moshi branch of Tsh5.3 billion, and sent to the cooler in Moshi.

They include William Onyango Ndanyi alias Daddy, Jimmy Maina Njoroge, Patrick Muthee Muriithi, Simon Githinji Kariuki, David Ngugi Mburu and Michael Mbanya Wathigo.

So far, five of the Kenyans in the Moshi jail have died in what still remain mysterious circumstances.

Below are the criminal profiles of some of the men who ruled the underworld:

Samuel Gitau Saitoti

Saitoti and his gang were reported to be the masterminds of the biggest bank robberies, carjackings of four-wheel drive vehicles and the murder of police officers in the period between 2003 and 2007.

A resident of Kajiado, the tall and light-complexioned gangster was said to have hideouts in Kiserian, Nairobi, Mombasa and Nakuru.

In Kenya, he was accused of involvement in the Fort Jesus Forex Bureau heist of October 2003, the daring rescue of his accomplices from the Embu GK Prison in August 2005, the murder of two police officers during a robbery in Mombasa on December 12, 2006, an armed robbery in Njoro on January 4, 2007 and the Habib Bank, Mombasa branch robbery of January 17, 2007.

The 30-year-old matatu driver and resident of Ngong was arrested in Arusha’s posh Liro estate while in the company of an accomplice identified as Peter Michael Kimani alias Kim.

The over 100 Tanzanian police officers and military personnel who laid siege on the house recovered seven guns, hand grenades, two bullet-proof jackets and over 85 rounds of ammunition from the pair.

Simon Matheri Ikeere

Police accused him of being behind the murder of renowned international scientist and AIDS researcher Prof Joel Bwayo, who was gunned down by criminals along the Kiserian-Isinya road.

Prof Bwayo’s wife and a foreign friend were seriously injured during the incident, in which Matheri and his accomplices are reported to have taken control of part of a road during a daring robbery spree.

Since 2000, Matheri’s criminal record was the worst, only rivalled by Rasta, Wanugu and Wacucu, the trio whose hunt in the 1990s dominated media reports before they, too, died in a hail of bullets.

Matheri was accused of at least 11 murders, rapes, robberies and carjackings.

He was also implicated in the killing of an American missionary and her daughter, who were attacked in the Kinoo area of Nairobi while waiting in their car for a friend to pick them up.

Several days later, he and his gang pursued a father and son — who had witnessed a robbery by the mob — to their home and shot them in cold blood.

Former police commissioner Hussein Ali had described Matheri a “public enemy number one,” and said he wanted him dead or alive.

For almost two years, Matheri and members of his gang arrest, in spite of a sustained hunt by a special squad of police officers. News of his death was received with celebrations, especially in his hometown of Gachie, which had had enough of him.

Even before Matheri’s cruelty had spread to the rest of the country, his neighbours had raided his home and torched his house and eight others belonging to his relatives.

The villagers’ fury had been aroused by the shooting to death of two people in the area, and witnesses had identified the attacker as Matheri.

He was gunned down together with an accomplice, Muchiri, who acted as his bodyguard. His wife and child were held in police cells for several days following his death before they were released.

Godfrey Matheri (The Naivasha Vampire)

We are definitely better off without this man roaming in our midst.

The man was not your conventional criminal, nor was he the kind that makes it to the police list of ‘the most wanted’.

He was simply ‘The Naivasha Vampire’, the man who lured women to his house, raped them, cut their veins and sucked their blood.

When the story broke out, police raided his den in their droves, and found the most shocking scene they had ever witnessed.

One of Matheri’s victims had died during an orgy, and the man had dug a shallow hole inside his hovel and buried her there. How he slept with the though of a dead body beneath his bed is hard to fathom.

Residents of Kihoto in Naivasha, where he stayed in a rented mud house, lived in fear as reports circulated that he had killed a dozen other women, yet he was still at large.

His hunts were, however, cut short when police arrested him and charged him with murder.

An earth mover was sent to the sleepy slum to excavate more bodies from the hovel, but the search was futile.

The Vampire is still in jail, thank God.

Edward Maina Shimoli

Unlike Matheri — and other criminals before him, — Shimoli was arrested and jailed, then gunned down shortly after he finished his prison term.

In early 2000, police declared this man the most dangerous villain on Kenyan soil, and set up a team to hunt him down. When he was arrested a few months later, the charge sheet read like a thriller.

He was reported to have killed his brother in law and shot his wife in the back after accusing them of tipping off the police about his criminal activities.

Things were even hard on him, given his rather unimpressive prison record. The man had escaped from jail three times — including once from the dreaded Kamiti Maximum Security Prison.

During interrogation after his arrest in Gitari by Flying Squad officers attached to the Kikuyu Police Station, Shimoli confessed to several murders and rapes.

The unsuspecting police officers had initially thought they were raiding a drugs den when Shimoli, who had sent some of his accomplices for shopping, met them at the door with a wide grin.

There was nothing he could do. He had been caught pants-down, with his favourite gun lying on a coffee table — loaded for the next hunt.
Most murderous

Shimoli was one of the most murderous criminals thing country has ever seen before he met his death.

He would spare nothing, not even a life, to regain his freedom — however short. Among the victims of his romps was a police officer, who was shot dead in Uhuru Park, Nairobi by his accomplices during one of his dramatic escapes from custody at the Kenyatta National Hospital, where he was being held.

During his appearances in court, Shimoli was photographed raising the middle finger at judicial officials, and had the audacity to light a roll of bhang within the corridors of justice. That very foolish act earned him one more year in the slammer.

He was accused of 14 murders, 88 rapes, countless bank robberies, car-jackings and drug deals.

However, the state failed to prove all the charges against him, and he was jailed for 12 years for illegal possession of a firearm.

A few years later, he walked out of prison a free man, having completed his term. He had protested against his release, saying he would not survive a day outside with the police on his heels.

He was right

Less than two months after his release, his body was found at the City Mortuary — with a bullet in the head.

It later emerged he had been gunned down in Ruai, in the outskirts of the city, three days earlier.

Peter Kimani Mungai

He was put on the police ‘Most Wanted’ list alongside nine other suspected criminals. However, despite being arrested and charged with various offences — among them robbery with violence, murder, cash-in-transit heists and rape — Kiragita (his nickname) managed to get out of prison on what police described as flimsy technicalities.

He was later arrested by Special Crime Prevention Unit detectives alongside a Charles Kimani and a former Administration Police officer, John Kamau Karuga, at a hideout in Kawangware.

He was described as a dangerous carjacker, involved in the May 24, 2004 daring daylight robbery at the Bank of Baroda in which Sh7.4 million was snatched.

Police insisted he was part of an 11-man gang that attempted to hijack a cash-in-transit van on its way from Nanyuki to Nairobi. Although four of his accomplices were arrested, Kiragita and six others managed to escape, but were traced through a concubine to Nairobi’s Kayole estate.

The female accomplice also led detectives to another wanted gangster, Thomas Gitau alias ‘Wamatumbo’.

Kiragita and his accomplices were also wanted for the cold-blooded murder of the then Officer Commanding Scenes of Crime, Apollo Jakait, who was shot dead in Ongata Rongai while driving home.

After his release from prison on June 20, 2004, Kiragita was shot dead by police at Industrial Area on May 20, 2005 during a robbery. He was in full police uniform at the time of his death.

He and his three accomplices had accosted a businessman, identified as Rajan Gautama, at the Entreprise Road/ Dar-es-Salaam Road junction, forced their way into his car and shot and injured him before robbing him of jewellery, a mobile phone and money. Police recovered three rifles, a pistol and 20 rounds of ammunition.

Godfrey Mulwa Kitheka

A native of Mutitu wa Ndooa in Kitui, the stout, dark-complexioned man who had hideouts in Mombasa, Nairobi’s Kayole and Umoja estates, Machakos and Mutito was implicated in a January 21, 2007 robbery in Machakos and another on the next day in Kitui, apart from the Mombasa Habib Bank robbery, the Njoro robbery, the Embu GK Prison rescue and the murder of two police officers in Mombasa.

source.nation.ke

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Racial behaviour lands one in court and the other deported: British soldier in court for slur on Kenyan policeman

Posted by African Press International on January 7, 2010

By NICHOLAS NGOLYO

A British Army officer on Wednesday denied assaulting a senior police officer and using derogatory words against him.

He is alleged to have called the officer a “black monkey.”

David Robins was arraigned before Kibera senior principal magistrate Grace Nzioka under tight security.

But the army man denied two charges of assault and creating a disturbance. He was released on a Sh50,000 bond with a surety of similar amount.

Mrs Nzioka also ordered Mr Robins, attached to Kifaru Barracks, to deposit his passport with the court. The case will be heard on March 16.

The prosecutor, chief inspector Francis Ndiema told the court on January 5 at Parklands Ojijo Roundabout, Nairobi, that the Briton unlawfully assaulted the Officer in-charge of Parklands (OCS), Chief Inspector Stephen Okal.

The court heard that at the time of the said assault the OCS was acting in due of execution of his duty.

Another charge stated that the accused created disturbance in a manner likely to cause a breach of the peace by using racist remarks “…….black monkey” to Mr Okal at the time of execution of his duty.

The police claims that the accused was driving on the wrong side on Limuru road towards the roundabout when he was stopped only to hurl abuse at the police.

In another incident in neighbouring Tanzania last December, a Canadian diplomat was recalled after he spat at a policeman directing traffic on a busy intersection.

Tanzanian media reported that ‘angered’ by a traffic jam, the envoy opened his car window and spat at the policeman.

The Foreign ministry said the incident was a humiliation, not just to the police officer but the entire country as well.

source.nation.ke

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Suspected to be a terrorist not wanted in East Africa: Kenya deports Jamaican cleric to Gambia

Posted by African Press International on January 7, 2010

By DAVE OPIYO

In Summary

  • Jamaican-born cleric was arrested on new year’s eve in Mombasa on accusations of links to terrorism shortly after entering Kenya from Tanzania.

Kenya has deported radical Jamaican preacher Sheikh Abdullah al-Faisal to The Gambia.

Immigration minister Otieno Kajwang said Thursday that the Muslim cleric was deported to the west African nation on his request.

He said that he government could not transport him to his native Jamaica.

“We could not find an airline to ferry him straight to his home country,” said the minister at his Nyayo House offices Thursday.

“The only way possible could have been through the US, but the country has already made its position over the matter known – they don’t want him there.”

He added: “We therefore had no option but take him to Banjul on his request. The Gambian Government have accepted to take him, so we had to send him there.”

It was not immediately clear whether the cleric, who has been in the country for ten days, left Kenya Wednesday night or Thursday morning.

But the move did not go down well with officials of a Muslim rights group, who expressed doubts as to whether the cleric was willingly expelled to Banjul, the Gambian capital.

Consequently, they demanded that the be furnished with copies of the official deportation order, the cleric’s air ticket, the airline passenger manifest and a signed statement indicating the cleric’s desire to be deported to Gambia.

Mr Al Amin Kimathi, the chair of the Muslim Human Rights Forum together with lawyer Harun Ndubi said the government ought to have sent the radical cleric to his home country – Jamaica.

‘It was his wish that he be taken to Jamaica, but not any other place,” said Mr Kimathi, who in the company of Lawyer Harun Ndubi, had sought audience with the Immigration minister to have the deportation order lifted.

“We are therefore wondering how the decision to take him to Gambia was reached. The official is just being mistreated on the basis of his alleged past record,” added the human right’s activist.

“He was jailed and released on parole and given a certificate of good conduct. We are not aware of any of his misdeeds.”

The immigration minister said that even though the cleric, who was held by Kenyan authorities at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport for the better part of Wednesday as they plotted his next destination, had not committed any crime in the country the fact that he was on the international terror watch list said it all.

“We are walking a tight rope here…we have been attacked by terrorists and it is only right if we seriously defend our borders. We will be doing so without violating our security,” said Mr Kajwang.

The Jamaican-born cleric was arrested on new year’s eve in Mombasa on accusations of links to terrorism shortly after entering Kenya from Tanzania.

Local Islamic pressure groups immediately denounced the arrest as an indication of government discrimination against Muslims.

Sheikh al-Faisal has had several run-ins with the law in a number of countries including Britain where he was a resident until deported to his native Jamaica on accusations of preaching racial and religious hatred.

In his sermons, he reportedly propagated the killing of non-Muslims.

The cleric, who entered Kenya by road from Tanzania through the Lunga Lunga border post, was flown to Nairobi for interrogation by the Anti-Terrorism Police Unit after his arrest.

Mr Kajwang said that Sheikh al-Faisal had slipped into Kenya through a small border post, explaining that had he used an airport or one of the major border posts where the Immigration controls are linked by computer, his name would have shown up on the watch list and he would not have been allowed entry.

source.standard.ke

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Online coning uge international problem: Online fraudsters prey on car buyers

Posted by African Press International on January 7, 2010

By Kiundu Waweru

Christopher, a businessman in Nairobi, had painstakingly and religiously saved money to purchase a car.

Chris would peruse motor magazines, visit the websites and window shop in local car bazaars as he prepared for the day he would have enough to buy his first car. Finally the day came for him to own a car.

He chose to buy his car from a popular online site that car dealers from Japan advertise their cars.

He was enticed to the site by the beautiful displays and the listings of the interior and exterior specifications of the car.

Chris chose a metallic Subaru Forrester, 2002 model and sent the money to the sellers. But what happened next is too bitter for Chris to narrate.

He requests a local car dealer and a friend to tell his story.

“After Chris identified the car at a reputable and popular site, he established rapport with the dealer and after agreeing on the price and shipment terms, he sent $4,870 (Sh365,000) which was to cater for cost of car, insurance and freight (C.I.F),” Frank Okemwa, Business Development Manager at Kenyacarbazaar.com continues with the story of Chris’s predicament.

After paying, Chris was told the car had been shipped and asked to wait for its documentation. “After two weeks, Chris had not received the documentation. His calls and emails went unanswered. He panicked and came to us. We are in the process of investigating his case using our partners in Japan,” Frank adds.

Even though Chris fell victim to the online fraudsters, the site, which is an established Internet system linking overseas automobile buyers and sellers in Japan, has put a caveat to the buyers. It advises buyers to seek the help of a local importer registered with them while importing cars.

Key warning

It goes on to tell consumers to exercise their judgment when buying cars listed on their site as it does not own, sell or even offer shipping services. It also warns that it does not inspect vehicles listed on its website.

Ironically, the site warns that not everyone is genuine and that buyers and sellers should take due diligence. Also, the online company says it has approximately 400 used car dealers in the Japanese domestic market and more than 2,700 auto companies in Japanese domestic market, has gone on to blacklist some companies, which users of its website from Kenya, Congo Tanzania and even Netherlands have reported to have defrauded them.

“You can’t trust some of these sites with their alluring cars. You must enlist the services of a reputable local importer. I have imported several cars safely this way. However, I have had many stories of people who have been swindled by on line fraudsters,” says Kenneth Gikung’a, who operates a fleet of cars for hire.

Okemwa says that most Kenyans only think of cutting costs thereby falling prey to the online crooks.

“Going to the online sites, one will be spoilt for choice,” he notes.He says lured by good bargains, pictures of nice wheels, clean engine and enticing bodywork, most people rush to send money.

He notes that in some cases the car arrives at the port with all the documents in order, but the vehicles are faulty.

Chances are that you won’t drive past Mtito Andei before it breaks down, he says.

faulty engines

“These dealers are cunning. While purchasing online, you just see the pictures but you can’t be sure of the car’s condition. Most probably the engine is messed up, and fraudsters do not give the right mileage. In some cases, the cars they post on the sites are not what you get when you buy as they send you a slightly different one,” Okemwa notes.

He recalls how a client had come to their office interested in importing a car from Europe. After being taken through what was available from their partners online, he chose an Audi Q 7.

“The car would have cost him £42,000(Sh5.04m). He left saying he would come later. The client did not come back, until much later. He looked beaten and stressed,” Okemwa recalls.

This man had gone online on his own and was excited to find the same make of a car with the same specifications but at a cheaper cost. The car was valued at £32000 (Sh3.8 m).

The client had gone on to send the money but after waiting for some time, the car never arrived.

“The client came back to us and we contacted our partner in the UK. We traced the car but unfortunately, the seller was already in jail. Apparently, he had stolen the car and, therefore, intended to dispose it fast. He got arrested before he shipped it,” Frank narrates.

Kevin Muigai who imports and sells vehicle locally remembers a case where a dealer lost a car to a woman in an interesting way.

“She had identified a car from a local online site and had shown interest, saying that she needed the car that same week as she would be travelling,” recalls Muigai. She then requested the seller to take the car to a place in Lang’ata so that she could appraise its condition. When they met, she asked to test drive it. Innocently, the car owner alighted leaving the engine revving and as he went round towards the passenger’s door, the beautiful woman coolly fell behind the steering wheel, accelerated and drove off at lightning speed. It is the last time the seller saw the vehicle. Not even the police could help him trace it.

Rampant crime

“Many online fraud schemes are a challenge to law enforcement agencies as they can not be confined within national boundaries or investigative jurisdictions. For that reason, it is essential to empower and educate consumers,” Okemwa notes.

“It is true cyber crime has become rampant, with people losing money on the net, where one can shop for anything. We have received many complaints of people who have lost millions this way,” Police Spokesman, Eric Kiraithe says. He says car-selling business has also been penetrated by some criminal agents who swindle buyers in the name of importing cars on their behalf. They ask for client’s money, import the vehicle and sell it to another person and pocket the profits.

“It is difficult to arrest these people, for they do not indicate their physical addresses. Even when we liaise with the countries where the fraud was perpetrated from, it remains hectic to nail them. The public should be prudent before giving out their money on online deals,” Kiraithe warns.

He advises prospective online buyers to familiarise themselves with the laws of the countries they are importing from.

“They should also visit the commercial attaches of the said countries and authenticate whether the company they want to deal with are genuine,” he adds. He laments that if apprehended, the fraudsters would only get three years behind bars.

“Our laws are very week. To curb crime, we need punitive laws like in the Eastern countries. Our laws lean towards the western countries where a criminal is seen to be a victim of social injustice rather than his own choice,” he says.

“I think if the Harmonised Draft Constitution is passed as it is currently, we will have many more problems as it leans towards rehabilitating criminals rather than punishing them,” he says tapping on a big volume titled, Criminological Perspectives, Essential Readings.

source.standard.ke

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Kenya suspected fraudsters: Wife and Daughter of Track It MD arrested

Posted by African Press International on January 7, 2010

y Standard Team

The wife and mother of defunct Track It Managing Director Shezad Tejani have been arrested in Nairobi over alleged fraud.

The two were picked up from their Westlands estate by officers from Banking Fraud Unit (BFIU) and taken in for questioning.

BFIU officers who questioned the two said they had a complaint against them from the ABC Bank regarding a Sh21 million loan that they had taken years ago.

Head of BFIU Mr Mohamed Amin said records had shown the two were directors of Track It before it went under and that was why they were arrested.

Amin said the two will appear in court tomorrow to face fraud related charges and that investigations into the case are ongoing.

“They are here with us but they will be appearing in court tomorrow over a case involving ABC Bank,” said Amin.

Reports indicated the two and some members of the Tejani family had arrived in the country in December for holidays. Tejani is still at large since a KTN expose revealed that some of the vehicles that were on Track It never had the tracking gadgets.

He is believed to have left the country last April after the story ran forcing the company to close down with debts. There were about 200 employees who were working there then.

source.standard.ke

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Kenya: Assailants go for man’s private parts

Posted by African Press International on January 7, 2010

By Robert Wanyonyi

A middle-aged man is in critical condition at Bungoma District Hospital after suspected cultists attempted to chop off his private parts.

The victim is recuperating at the hospital after doctors stitched back his severed private parts.

A nurse attends to a man, 30, on Monday after assailants almost severed his private parts. Photo: Benjamin Sakwa/Standard

The bizarre incident, which happened at Mjini Estate, Bungoma town, took locals by surprise.

According to a nurse at the hospital Zaituni Aguvana, the victim could hardly speak as he was still traumatised.

“We have stitched back the private parts. He lost a lot of blood during the incident. We, however, controlled the bleeding ,” Ms Aguvana told The Standard at the hospital.

Drinking spree

The man was reportedly lured to a drinking spree by his assailants who later dragged him to an unknown place. They are then said to have attempted to cut off his private parts.

The victim thwarted their efforts by screaming for help causing them to speed away. His cry for help attracted locals who found him bleeding profusely.

Bungoma OCPD Mary Omari said police were investigating the motive of the attack.

She said one suspect has been arrested and is assisting police with investigations.

“Contrary to what has been rumoured, the victim’s private parts have not been severed off. It’s true he has been cut a little but it’s too early to say it’s a cultist attack,” Omari told reporters in her office.

source.standard.ke

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