By NATION REPORTER and AFP newsdesk@ke.nationmedia.co, Saturday, May 25 2013
In Summary
- On Saturday, Britain’s intelligence services were under pressure to explain their knowledge of two Islamists suspected of hacking a soldier to death in London, amid claims they had tried to recruit one of them
A
British man who attacked and allegedly killed a soldier with an
accomplice in London was detained in Kenya last year and deported to the
UK, it has emerged.
A friend of Michael Adebolajo, Abu
Nusaybah, told BBC television that Adebolajo had been picked up by
Kenyan police and treated roughly while in detention.
Mr
Nusaybah was arrested by British police shortly after recording the
interview at the BBC. Mr Adebolajo, whose parents are from Nigeria, and
another suspect shocked Londoners when they confronted a British soldier
near an Army barracks and allegedly killed him with knives and meat
cleavers.
Both men were shot and are in detention. Mr
Nusaybah alleged that Adebolajo was arrested while studying in a village
in Kenya last year. After refusing to answer questions, Adebolajo was
told that he was “not in the UK” and was then tortured, he claimed.
On
his return, “he became more reclined [sic], less talkative. He wasn’t
his bubbly self,” said Nusaybah, who said that the experience further
radicalised Adebolajo.
Contacted, Kenyan police said
they could not comment on the allegations. Administration Police
spokesman Masoud Mwinyi said he would have to find out the particulars
of the case before issuing a statement on the matter.
On
Saturday, Britain’s intelligence services were under pressure to
explain their knowledge of two Islamists suspected of hacking a soldier
to death in London, amid claims they had tried to recruit one of them,
reported the Guardian.
The two – who remained
under armed guard in hospital after being shot by police at the scene –
were known to the intelligence services but were reportedly assessed as
not posing a deadly threat.
Mr Nasaybah was arrested at
the BBC after telling the broadcaster that British security services
had tried to recruit the murder suspect.
He told BBC
television on Friday that Adebolajo was asked by the MI5 domestic
intelligence agency if he knew certain individuals and later if he
wanted to work for them.
He said Adebolajo had snubbed
their approach. The BBC said Abu Nusaybah was promptly arrested on their
premises after giving the interview.
Scotland Yard
police headquarters said counter-terror officers had arrested a
31-year-old man in London on suspicion of the “commission, preparation
or instigation of acts of terrorism”.
It is understood
the arrest was not directly linked to the brutal murder of soldier Lee
Rigby, who was hacked to death in broad daylight on Wednesday outside
the Royal Artillery Barracks in Woolwich, southeast London.
Rigby’s
distraught wife said the family found it hard to accept that the
25-year-old had been killed not in a war zone but on the streets of his
own country.
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