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Garissa accomplice gets life, two others 41 years, for Kenya massacre

Wednesday July 03 2019
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The three convicts found to have abetted the Al-Shabaab attack that left 148 people in Garissa University dead when they appeared in a Nairobi court on July 3, 2019 for sentencing. PHOTO | RICHARD MUNGUTI | NMG

By NATION AFRICA

Three convicts were on Wednesday jailed by a Nairobi court for abetting the attack on Garissa University in northeastern Kenya in 2015 that left 148 people dead.

Nairobi Chief Magistrate Francis Andayi handed Mohamed Ali Abdikar and Hassan Aden Hassan 41 years in prison.

Rashid Charles Mberesero, a Tanzanian, got a life sentence for his involvement in the terror assault.

"In this attack, many lives were lost and members of the public left in a panic," said Judge Andayi, as he sentenced the trio.

The three convictions are the first to result from a long-running investigation and prosecution.

All three were found guilty last month of being members of Al-Shabaab, a Somali jihadist group linked to al-Qaeda that carried out the attack.

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Four Al-Shabaab gunmen stormed the students' hall of residence firing their weapons at dawn on April 2 2015, before separating the victims according to their religion.

Muslims were allowed to go but the rest were slaughtered, most of them Christians.

It was the second-bloodiest terror attack in Kenya's history, surpassed only by al-Qaeda's bombing of the US embassy in Nairobi in 1998 that killed 213 people.

A fourth person, Sahal Diriye Hussein, was acquitted, according to the court's verdict, issued on June 19.

All four gunmen were killed by security forces.

In 2016, the operation's suspected ringleader, Mohamed Mohamud, also named "Kuno," a former professor at a Koranic school in Garissa, was killed in southwestern Somalia.

According to the Shabaab, he was killed by "US crusaders".

The Shabaab were chased out of Mogadishu in 2011 by the 22,000-strong African Union peace-enforcement mission, Amisom.

They nevertheless control swathes of the countryside and remain the key threat to peace in Somalia.

The group is fighting to overthrow the internationally backed government in Mogadishu.

It has also carried a string of attacks in neighbouring Kenya, which has troops in Amisom.

In September 2013, the Shabaab claimed responsibility for a raid on the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi that killed 67 people over a four-day siege.

—Additional reporting by AFP

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