NAIROBI— Kenyan authorities have arrested seven prison wardens following the escape of three convicts who were serving jail terms for terrorism-related crimes.
Interior Cabinet Secretary Fred Matiangi said on Tuesday that preliminary investigations revealed that the escape from the heavily guarded prison facility was abetted by laxity and incompetence.
“We will not only go the direction investigations will point us at but we will act resolutely to ensure this kind of recklessness does not happen again because it exposes our people,” he said in a statement issued in Nairobi.
“We are all mobilized and we have sent messages across the country and all exit and possible movement points out of the country. We are going to conduct a massive manhunt for those three.”
“They are dangerous criminals and we have to get them. And we are going to get them,” he said.
The Kenyan official urged Kenyans not to panic over the latest mysterious escape of dangerous prisoners, saying security teams are on high alert.
On Monday, a Kenyan sentenced for involvement in one of the country’s worst militant attacks and two other prisoners detained for terror-related charges escaped the Kamiti Maximum Security Prison.
Mohamed Ali Abikar was serving a 41-year jail term for involving in the 2015 killing of 148 students in Kenya.
Musharaf Abdalla Akhulunga, known as Zarkawi, is another escapee who was arrested in 2012 for participating in a failed terrorist attack on the parliament building in Nairobi.
Joseph Juma Odhiambo, known as Yusuf, was arrested in November 2019 in Somalia while he was attempting to enlist with the al-Qaeda-affiliated al-Shabaab terror group.
Kenyan police offer a reward of 60 million shillings ($535,000) to anyone with information that may lead to the arrest of the three escapees.
Kenya contributes with troops to the African Union peacekeeping mission in Somalia, which has weakened al-Shabaab, a terror group that has been fighting to overthrow the Somali government for years.
The group vowed to carry out terror attacks in Kenya until it pulls out its soldiers from Somalia.
In September 2013, al-Shabaab killed 67 people in a four-day siege at the high-end Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi.
Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK