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Kenyan Muslims Protest Abduction of Campaigner
Issue 293
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The Pride & City of Mayor Jiir

Somalia suspends flights to Somaliland

Somaliland Overhaul Ministry Foreign Affairs

Ethiopia Troops Will Not Deploy In Somaliland: Ambassador

French Judges Politicizing Death Probe-Djibouti

Opinions Mixed As Reconciliation Conference Winds Up

U.S provide funds to improve social services in

Norway Slashes Development Aid to Ethiopia

The Dangerous Smell Of Crude Oil That May Ignite A New Civil War In Somalia

Somalia: Heavy Fighting Erupts Overnight in Capital

Regional Affairs

Summons in Djibouti death probe

Somalia Opposition Conference Delayed - Diplomats

Editorial
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International News

A man alone: The twilight of the Bush presidency

IAEA confirms the "peaceful nature of Iran's nuclear activities"

Public Debate in Kuwait Following Switch to Friday-Saturday Weekend

Farah battles for recognition beyond the comfort zone of Europe

Briefing: Ban Ki-moon tackles crisis in Darfur

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Kosovo prepares unilateral independence declaration

Ethiopia 'blocking MSF in Ogaden'

Bin Laden Firm Aims To Build Whole Cities

Friendly Fire

Whose Genocide Will It Be?

ETHIOPIA : EMERGENCY AID MUST REACH ITS INTENDED BENEFICIARIES IN THE OGADEN

Somalia: Kenyan Embassy Re-Opened

Food for thought

Opinions

Clan-Politics Induced Toxicity In Somaliland Sports

Political Leadership Failures & Deficiencies

Somaliland Democracy vs. An Era Of Dictatorship On The Horizon

ETHIOPIAN – SOMALILAND RELATION

Open Letter To Dahir Rayale: Let’s Do In Somalia What The UN Could Not Do

Democracy and Judicial Independence

Arrest of vicious politicians: The immorality of ignorant power

The internationally approved Sub-clan cleansing/genocide in Moqadisho/Somalia

By Malcolm Webb

A Kenyan human rights group says a campaigner has disappeared in Nairobi, taken by people they suspect were Kenyan security agents. The lobby is planning to hold demonstrations this week in response

Kenya

Nairobi, 27 August 2007 - The Nairobi-based Muslim Human Rights Forum is arranging street protests, following what they believe was the abduction of Farah Mohammed Abdullahi by Kenyan anti-terror police. Abdullahi was a vocal campaigner for the release of Kenyans held abroad for alleged terrorism links. The chairman of the forum, Al-Amin Kimathi, gave his account of what happened.

"Last Sunday but one, at about seven o'clock, as he was leaving the mosque in the Eastleigh section of Nairobi. He was confronted. Eyewitnesses say there were two gentlemen. To them they appeared quite friendly and later on he was put in a car, which they identified as one of the cars they suspected to belong the anti-terrorist police unit. From then on he has never been seen," he said.

Kimathi says the eyewitnesses have been advised by lawyers not to speak to the media because of fear for their safety. He says after nearly a week of extensive searching by Abdullahi's family, friends and the Forum, they concluded he had been taken by Kenyan authorities but the police have denied any involvement.

Abdullahi was known for his campaigning, in particular for the release of his younger brother, Abdi Mohammed Abdullahi, who was arrested by Kenyan police at the beginning of this year. Kimathi says Abdullahi had been in contact with Abdi, who said he had been take first to Mogadishu, and later imprisoned in Ethiopia.

Abdi was one of more than one-hundred-and-fifty people from at least eighteen countries, who were arrested near the border of Somalia, during the war between Somali Islamists and Ethiopian forces earlier this year. Some have since been released.

Human Rights groups say most of those arrested ended up in Ethiopian prisons, but Ethiopia has confirmed detaining only forty-one terror suspects.

Kimathi claims the Kenyan government is not pressing for the return of Kenyan detainees.

"We are seeing a pattern that is developing where the police act as if they are a law unto themselves, and the government does not even come to heed the cries to have the human rights and the legal rights of suspects adhered to," Kimanthi said.

VOA was unable to reach the Kenyan police for comment.

Human rights groups say Washington has a great deal of influence in the region, and say Kenya appears to have followed the clandestine U.S. practice of rendition, or transferring detainees to other countries.

Source: VOA

 


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