One of the masterminds of the 1998 US embassy bombings in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam, Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, has been killed in Mogadishu, authorities in Nairobi confirmed on Saturday.
Police commissioner Matthew Iteere told the Sunday Nation that Fazul was killed at a checkpoint in the Somali capital by Somalia’s Transitional Federal Government officers.
US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton was the first US official to publicly confirm the death of Fazul.
She called it “a just end for a terrorist who brought so much death and pain to so many innocents” from the embassy bombings.”
Fazul’s death brought to an end one of the most elaborate and expensive manhunts in East Africa.
But a network – probably battered by Fazul’s death – remains that security agencies in the region will still have to dismantle.
Separately, anti-terrorism police sources said that DNA identification tests had been conducted on the bodies of the two men killed at the road block before their identity was confirmed.
The other was a Somali national. Reuters news agency quoted Mogadishu police confirming they had killed Fazul.
“He had a fake South African passport and of course other documents. After thorough investigations, we confirmed it was him, and then we buried his corpse,” the news agency quoted Halima Aden, a senior national security officer in Mogadishu.
Security agencies also issued a picture of the man who had eluded capture for nearly 13 years and who was believed to epitomise al Qaeda and al Shabaab activities across East Africa.
The picture showed that Fazul had apparently been shot in the chest and his head was intact.
Fazul, believed to be about 38 (his exact date of birth is not known), joined al-Qaeda in Afghanistan and trained there with Osama bin Laden, the terror network’s leader, according to the transcript of an FBI interrogation of a known associate.
The US government had placed a $5m (about Sh400 million) reward on his head for allegedly conspiring to bomb the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998.
He was also suspected of planning the bombing of the Paradise Beach Hotel at Kikambala in Kilifi and a near simultaneous attempt to shoot down an Israeli aircraft in November 2002. In the Kikambala bombing, 15 people were killed and more than 80 injured.
Fazul was said to have held citizenship in the Comoros Islands and Kenya. He was indicted on September 17, 1998, in a U.S. federal district court in Manhattan for his alleged involvement in the bombings of the US embassies.
It is understood that President Kibaki was briefed on Thursday about the killing of the man most wanted for the embassy bombings that killed 201 Kenyans and 12 Americans on August 7, 1998.
The incident happened on the northwestern outskirts of the Somali capital, according to a regional security source.
The two men were driving in a pickup truck full of medicine, laptops and mobile phones. They apparently took a wrong turn while trying to reach an al Shabaab position and ended up in an area under TFG control.
A Somali source close to the investigation said Fazul was carrying a South African passport in the name of Daniel Robinson that gave his date of birth as 1971.
The passport issued April 13, 2009 indicated that its bearer left South Africa for Tanzania on March 19 and was granted a visa there. The Tanzanian visa was the only one in the passport.
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