DusitD2 terror executor linked to military officer in 78 Tank Battalion

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The 22 hours horrific attack came to an end after  three teams drawn from the General Service Unit elite Recce squad took the lead in an effort to take control of the situation that left several people with injuries.

Other armed teams, both in civilian and police uniform were carefully evacuating hundreds of people who were caught in the incident.

“Breath in, breath in…” they would tell the visibly frightened survivors.

Detectives drawn from the DCI based bomb squad have combed the 14 riverside crime scene and have since detonated explosives found in the complex.Image result for 78 battalion isiolo

However detectives have noted that one of the men suspected to be linked to Tuesday’s terror attack in Nairobi is the only son of a Kenya Defence Forces soldier.

Ali Salim Gichunge, whose name featured in the attack on the dusitD2 hotel that left more than 20 people dead, left home four years ago. His father was at one time based at the 78 Battalion and is still in service.
Earlier reports indicated that Gichunge might have been one of the attackers killed on Tuesday. Yesterday, another conflicting report indicated that he was alive and in police custody.Image result for isiolo barracks secondary school

The suspect started his education at the Catholic Church-sponsored Hekima Primary School in Isiolo before transferring to Isiolo Barracks Primary School, where he completed Standard Eight in 2010 and joined the adjacent Isiolo Barracks Secondary School inside the Kenya Army 78 Battalion barracks.

Born in Isiolo town in 1992, family sources described Gichunge as an introvert and highly religious person who liked football and hated school from an early age.
He disappeared from the family’s radar in 2015 after completing high school in 2014. He has never returned home to visit his mother, a housewife, and four sisters, two of who are still in primary school.
“We miss him so much as our only brother,” one of the siblings said.

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Gichunge first worked as an attendant at Al Shamz Hotel and later at an adjacent cyber cafe.
His former headteacher at Isiolo Barracks Primary School, David Kaberia, described him as a perennial truant.
“When his father worked at the 78 Tanks Battalion, he transferred the son to the school from Hekima, but although he was a devout Muslim, he was not committed to school,” he said.
The family is believed to have donated the land on which the local mosque stands.

In 2015 Gichunge travelled to Nairobi, never to return home.
According to a chief in Isiolo, the family had reported that their son had disappeared after visiting a police station. The family said they last saw him in 2015, but he called them in 2016.

Why do people disappear to on arrival to Nairobi?

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