The cyber-thriller is available for streaming on Netflix
Charred pieces of bodies, enough to fill two boxes, have been recovered from the part of a Kenyan shopping mall that had collapsed when security forces battled terrorists who invaded the mall, officials said on Friday. Four AK-47 rifles believed to have been used by the attackers were also recovered.
A security official said it is possible the remains are of the attackers but it would not be definitively known until tests are carried out. The two boxes were taken to the morgue on Thursday, and on Friday Western forensic examiners arrived there and locked the boxes containing the remains, a morgue official said. FBI agents have been investigating since soon after gunmen invaded the chic Westgate Mall in Nairobi on September 21.
One of the four gunmen was identified by a real name for the first time: Abdi Dhuhulow, a Norwegian-Somali according to the security official. Norwegian tax records show a Hassan Abdi Dhuhulow was born in 1990 and was registered at an address in Larvik, southern Norway, as late as 2009.
One man living in another Scandinavian country, who only gave his first name, Yussuf, said he believed he had met the gunman at a gathering of Somali immigrants in Oslo, Norway’s capital, in 2008.
Yussuf recalled the man’s name as Abdi and said he was associated with “pretty radical” circles in Norway.
“He was mad. He didn’t feel at home in Norway,” Yussuf said, declining to give his last name out of fear of reprisals from Al Shebab sympathisers. Yussuf said he had not had any contact with the man since then but added that several people he knew thought they had recognised him in the closed-circuit TV footage of the mall attack.
“We said that it could be him when we looked at the video,” Yussuf said.
Newly released security video shows that four gunmen entered the mall and casually opened fire on shoppers, the beginning of a four-day siege that resulted in a massive fire and the mall’s partial collapse.
Four AK-47 rifles and 11 magazines of ammunition — all apparently used by the attackers — were also found in the mall rubble, the security official said. A rocket-propelled grenade, likely from Kenyan security forces, was also recovered. The two officials insisted on anonymity because the information has not been released publicly.
The Somali militant group Al Shebab claimed responsibility for the attack, saying it was in retaliation for Kenya sending troops into Somalia to go after the group. The gunmen stormed the mall just after noon on a busy shopping day. The siege, which set off heavy battles with Kenyan security forces, lasted four days and resulted in RPGs being fired inside the mall, a massive fire and the collapse of the mall’s main grocery and department store.
The cyber-thriller is available for streaming on Netflix
'Music is a more honest place for me where I feel like I can say things that I wouldn't say,' admits the star
Last month, she was banned from being a charity trustee for five years
The authority also seized ready-to-use marijuana that was being stored with the intention of selling in the country
Make-up artist says Brooks raped her in a hotel room in Los Angeles in 2019
Educators in early childhood centres, schools, and higher education institutions may be eligible based on certain criteria
Besides wanting to 'settle scores' with racists targeting her community, Horvath raps in Romani to keep the language alive
Typhoon Gaemi floods killed 48 in the country in late July; Citizen science could hold key to disaster mitigation