Suspected Al shaabab brides from left Umur Kheir, Mariam Said and Khadijah Abubakar at the Mombasa Court on Monday,030th March,2015. Kheir, a Tanzanian and the two Kenyans from Malindi were arrested by Kenyan Securities at Elwak in Mandera Border suspected to be going to join Al Shaabab group in Somalia and be used as suicide bombers. [PHOTO BY MAARUFU MOHAMED/STANDARD]
Two university students, one of them the son of a senior government official, are believed to have abandoned their studies and joined the Al-Shabaab terror group in Somalia. Mahmoud Ahmed, a second year Bachelor of Science student at the University of Nairobi (UoN), and his cousin Mohamed Abdulswamed, a student at Moi University, have been missing since April 21. Mahmoud is a son of Dr Yassin Ahmed, a director of the National Museums of Kenya. Dr Ahmed is also a former member of the National Cohesion and Integration Commission (NCIC). He becomes the first high-profile government official to lose a child to the terror group that is feared to be on a recruiting spree in institutions of higher learning. The two students left in abruptly after sitting their examinations and selling their laptops. They are believed to have been picked up by Al-Shabaab recruiters in the city the same day. Police investigations suggest the duo left on short notice, presumably on directions of a third party, as they left with their wet clothes from the campus laundry lines. See also: Chinese experts train farmers on modern farming methods The families of the two have so far reported to the authorities on the missing students who according to the police have been traced to Somalia. Dr Yassin declined to comment further on the issue, saying it is now under active police investigations. “Let us not discuss it please. It is a matter in the hands of police,” he said. The development came as the Director of the National Counter Terrorism Centre (NTTC), Isaac Ochieng, revealed that students in institutions of higher learning are being recruited into violent Islamic fundamentalism at an alarming rate. “We have intelligence that there are students within this university who are on the payroll of Al-Shabaab. It is very sad,” he said on Monday at UoN during a presentation on countering violent extremism. Mr Ochieng said NTTC has names of students who have been radicalised and are enjoying salaries from Al-Shabaab and other militia groups affiliated to Al-Qaeda. “There is increased recruitment, training and indoctrination of the youth into terrorism cells. These terror groups are now targeting brilliant youths to recruit,” he said.