Dirty Trick Alshabaab Uses to Launch IED Attacks on Govt Vehicles

The wreckage of a vehicle which reportedly hit an IED, killing 10 GSU officers in October

The government has revealed details as to how Al-shabaab terrorists launch attacks on police and military vehicles patrolling volatile areas near the Kenya-Somalia border.

According to government spokesman Cyrus Oguna, the militants launch their attacks from tree tops, where they lie in hiding waiting for their victims.

Once they see an oncoming vehicle, Oguna said, they throw down improvised explosives towards the vehicles.

This is contrary to the general assumption that the terrorists plant the IEDs on the ground so that vehicles can run them over, causing deadly explosions.

Oguna added that IEDs used by Al-shabaab attackers are often very strong and hard to detect since they are not signal-based.

IED attacks on vehicles is a popular war tactic amongst Al-shabaab operatives which has claimed the lives of dozens of Kenyan law enforcement officers.

In October, 10 GSU officers died after their elite unit encountered an IED attack on their vehicle in Liboi, Garissa County, in the latest such attack on security agencies.

Police have since launched a manhunt for one Abdullahi Banati, who is believed to have led the deadly attack against the Recce Squad.

Abdullahi Banati

In an interesting twist of fate, 4 militants died in June when an IED they were setting up targeting police vehicles in  Lamu County blew up prematurely.

The site where an IED exploded prematurely, killing 4 Alshabaab militants

Public concern has been raised over the continuous deaths of police officers patrolling volatile areas despite the government having procured Armoured Personnel Carriers to shield officers from the impact of bomb and gunfire attacks.

President Uhuru Kenyatta aboard an armoured army vehicle

Also in the government’s possession is Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicles which can withstand the impact of rocket-propelled grenades.

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