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Africa Horn | |||
Alarm as Kenyan youths enlisted in al Shabaab killed | |||
2011-05-12 | |||
[The Nation (Nairobi)] These were his last words: "Everyone was born alone and whenever I die, I should be buried in accordance to Mohammedan rituals." Suleiman Hassan, 27, spoke those words to his mother and then left home to go to Somali where he died fighting for the al Shabaab terrorists.
His mother Saum Mwachambuni is yet to come to terms with the death of her only son. "When I got news of his death, the words he told me the last day I saw him echoed in my mind. But I am not yet convinced that Hassan is dead. I hope one day I will see him coming back home smiling as he used to," she said. The distressed mother said the caller from Somalia on April 5, described how his son was buried. "I was told my son married as soon as he reached there, and when he died he was buried in his house."
The mother left no doubt that the agents are in the mosques, since her son is said to have left with some religious leaders. Accompanied son "It is a pity that nobody wants to tell me more, even his close friends who accompanied my son. That's why I still have doubt if really my son has died," she said. The mother said the event had affected her daughter, who is now traumatised. Whenever her daughter sees any stranger in the house, she thinks more family members are targeted. "She was very close to her brother Hassan," Ms Mwachambuni said. Her story is not the only one, since several families have confessed that they are mourning relatives, who have died in Somalia after they were secretly sneaked out to help al Shabaab fight the internationally-recognised Transitional Federal Government forces for control of lawless Somalia. Secret funerals organised by relatives and friends of youth from Kenya have been on the increase in the province, raising concern among religious leaders and government officials. The number of youth reported to have died in the war have been on the increase, with at least a case reported in different regions in Coast Province every month. Despite different families undergoing trauma after losing their loved ones in Somalia, they are afraid to reveal any more details as they are worried the government may use the information against them. The Council of Imams and Preachers of Kenya national treasurer Sheikh Omar Hassan has confirmed that several youths have died in Somalia, while some are still in the hands of the outlawed group. While the council in Mombasa has statistics of up to 10 dead youths, Sheikh Omar said the number could be as high as 50, with those returning posing a security threat to the country.
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Posted by:Fred |
#1 "When I got news of his death, the words he told me the last day I saw him echoed in my mind. But I am not yet convinced that Hassan is dead. I hope one day I will see him coming back home smiling as he used to," she said she's lying. Everyone knows smiling is unIslamic |
Posted by: Frank G 2011-05-12 09:41 |