Pushed out of its former strongholds, militant group al-Shabab has been moving lots of men and equipment into southern Somalia, especially
Lower Juba and Gedo, the two regions that border Kenya.

Analysts say this is one area
where the Islamist group can still project its power and put pressure on authorities.

In the early hours of Tuesday, heavily armed al- Shabab militants entered tents in a village just outside of Mandera, Kenya and killed 36 quarry
workers. Ten days earlier, the group executed 28 people in nearby Arabia village.

The attacks led Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta to replace his interior minister and
accept a retirement request from Kenya’s police chief.

Proximity, access

So how is a Somali militant group able to move so easily within Kenya and carry out such deadly attacks with little interference from security
forces?

Robleh Garaad, a local journalist and a resident in the northeast, said the area’s proximity to
Somalia helps al-Shabab carry out its attacks.

First, he said, the area targeted is not that far from the border with Somalia. He also said the
people who are planning or executing these attacks are not coming from a distance, they are
inside the country, they are part of the community, and they live in Mandera. He said
planning and carrying out these kinds of attacks is not taking them a massive amount of time.

Al-Shabab has been laying the groundwork for its operations inside Kenya for years, according to Cedric Barnes, the Horn of Africa project director of the International Crisis Group.

“First being the result of a longstanding recruitment and radicalization in parts of Kenya,
including northeastern Kenya, over a long period that has taken people into Somalia and trained
as jihadists and then redeploy them into Kenya or push them across the border from Somalia,”
said Barnes.

Barnes said lack of coordination between Kenya’s new county governments and the central government also has weakened the security response.

Ironically, the success of African Union peacekeepers in pushing al-Shabab from Somalia’s major cities also may be contributing
to the spate of attacks along the border. The militants have regrouped in southern Somalia,
and are taking advantage of the porous Kenya- Somalia border to make attacks that show the
group still has strength.

Escalating violence In 2011, Kenya sent troops into Somalia following a string of suspected al-Shabab attacks on foreign tourists and aid workers in coastal and northeast Kenya.

Since then, Kenya has merged
its forces with AU forces in Somalia, but al- Shabab attacks in Kenya have increased
dramatically.

Last year’s attack on Nairobi’s Westgate shopping mall killed more than 70 people and was followed by several deadly attacks in the town of Mpeketoni.

Local Kenyans have been very critical of the government. Some politicians even have called for the withdrawal of troops from Somalia.

Garaad echoed some of the sentiments in the northeast and the rest of Kenya.

“The feeling among the intellectuals and politicians is that a complete security revamp is needed,” he said. “Ethiopia has a border with Somalia and was involved in fighting al-Shabab,
the previous government and the Islamic courts, yet Al-Shabab doesn’t dare to attack, so there is
something missing that Kenya is not doing right, some techniques are missing. Kenya got involved
in a mission beyond its capability, and troops are
not seasoned enough.”

So far, Kenya has shown no sign of backing down from the fight against al-Shabab. However,
the security shakeup indicates the Kenyan government is beginning to listen to the
complaints of its people.

Source: VOA

Aside  —  Posted: December 4, 2014 in Africa News
Tags:

Private schools in Nyeri County have opposed a proposed registration charges under
the county government.

Kenya Primary School Association (KPSA) said
that they were not consulted
when the Revenue Administration Bill, 2014 was being drafted.

“We are urging the county government to consult us before the bill is passed having that
they did not consult us when drafting this proposed charges,” Nyeri County Chairman of Kenya
Primary Association (KPSA) said.

According to the proposed Revenue Administration Bill 2014, Sh 10,000 will be charged to register new ECDE centers in urban and sh 5000 for those in rural specific location and an annual registration fee of 300 per child in urban and sh 200 in rural areas.

And initial registration charges of sh 30,000 for new private schools in town, 20,000 for those
in rural areas and annual license per child of sh 1000 in urban and sh 700 in rural.

50,000 for both new private tertially colleges/ institutions in initial registration for both in rural and urban. And sh 100,000 annual registration for students below 100 and 200,000 annual for students above 100 in both urban and rural specific locations respectively.

“It is not workable. This is too much tax added to the parents ,”Ngunjiri Wanjohi said.

Wanjohi noted that implementing the bill will
affect the operations of private schools in Nyeri county.

He said that some private schools have already closed down due to lack of funds having that some of them run through loans and borrowed funds.

In addation he said that the bill will discourage local investors and lead unemployment if
implemented.

“Implimentation of the bill is loss to the county government society,” Wanjohi said.

The private schools will be doing a double registration having that they registered under the National government.

Speaking yesterday in Nyeri town Wanjohi said that a t he county government should carry out a research to know how private
schools run.

He discarded the notion that private schools are businesses.

Aside  —  Posted: December 4, 2014 in Kenya News