A look at the Heroin mess Left in Kenya by the Akasha Brothers

Baktash Akasha, Gulam Hussein, Ibrahim Akasha and Vijaygiri Goswami at the Chief Magistrate's court in Mombasa on May 6, 2016./Mkamburi Mwawasi.

Almost four years, since the Akasha brothers were first arrested in Mombasa, the country and Kenyans have not fully recovered from the damage the two caused at the Kenyan coast with their Heroin menace.

However, Kenyans can find solace in the fact that the two brothers Baktash Akasha and Ibrahim Akasha have pleaded guilty to six counts of drug trafficking in the Southern District of New York.

The two drug cartels could facing a very long time in a US prison if found guilty.

In 2014, Baktash and Abdalla Akasha were among four suspects arrested in Nyali over their alleged involvement in trafficking 98 heroin packets.

State counsel, Alexander Mutei, told the court that the suspects were on Interpol’s watch list. He then sought 21 days in remand for the suspects, to allow the extradition process to be completed.

The duo were extradited to the U.S. in January 2017 after government agencies from the two countries discovered a major smuggling operation.

Heroin addiction is a big menace at the Kenyan coast. Statics show that there are more than ten thousand Heroin addicts in Mombasa County alone.

Medical stakeholders will hope that the number goes down especially with the conviction of the chief cartels.

The conviction of the two brothers brings the end to a family empire that started with their father Ibrahim Akasha. The senior Akasha was gunned down in an alleged assassination in Amsterdam, Netherlands in 2000.

He left behind three wives, sons and daughters to continue running the Ksh.20billion family business. Kamaldin Akasha, Baktash Akasha and Ibrahim Abdalla Akasha hit the road running amidst a waging family feud over control of the estate.

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The three daughters have since kept out of limelight and very little is known about them.

Two years later, another tragedy struck: Ibrahim’s second-born son Kamaldin Akasha also died. Kamaldin died at Pandya Hospital in Mombasa after a hemorrhagic shock due to gunshots to the neck and head.

The incident occurred at a fuel station in Makupa and was carried out by unknown people. This cast Baktash Akasha as a figure-head in the family, with him taking over alongside a young Ibrahim Abdalla.

Their mother, 62-year-old Mrs Fatma Akasha however still maintains that her sons are innocent.

According to Mrs Akasha, she and her three daughters have been left to look after the family, including the children of the accused brothers. The two men left behind 12 children: Baktash’s eight children and Ibrahim’s four.

 

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