Fire engines at the Jomo Kenyatta Internationa Airport on August 7, 2013.
In Summary
- GSU men to be arraigned in court as police probe the disappearance of four illegal migrants on Wednesday
Seven police officers have been arrested for looting when fire
broke out at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport as the mystery
surrounding four passengers awaiting deportation deepened on Friday.
The seven instructors, including an inspector of
police from the General Service Unit, may be arraigned in court on
Monday over the looting on Wednesday morning.
The men were supervising the course officers who
had been brought in to offer reinforcement but items allegedly stolen
from the building that was under fire were found in their possession.
Alcohol stolen
They include cash and alcohol from some of the
destroyed shops. The Inspector of Police, Mr David Kimaiyo, on Friday
said he had not been properly briefed but warned that stern action would
be taken against any officer found to have been involved.
This happened as police focused their
investigations on four passengers who were awaiting deportation when the
fire broke out but cannot be traced.
Of particular concern to the detectives was the
whereabouts of an illegal immigrant who had been denied access into the
country. The man, of Somali descent, was being held at the immigration’s
Prohibited Immigrants Room at the airport when the fire broke out.
Mr Joseph Mathinji Muriithi, the senior
immigration officer in charge of the night shift, told detectives that
when he was alerted of the fire, he went and ordered the transfer of the
passenger to the JKIA police station.
In his statement, he did not indicate the
passenger’s name, only saying he was of Somali origin. Mr Muriithi also
said that he never took the prisoner to the police station himself but
asked a junior officer to do it.
However, when the detectives checked at the
station, the man was not there and there were no police records
indicating that he had been booked in custody.
Investigators yesterday collected some samples at
the scene of the fire including burnt items. They are trying to
establish the nature of a substance that was seen oozing from the
ceiling board shortly before the fire broke out.
Mr Muriithi on Thursday told detectives that when
he went to the area where the smoke was coming from, he saw a sticky
white liquid oozing from the ceiling board of the immigration offices.
There was speculation that this substance could be related to the fire outbreak.
The staff of Kenya Airways are also to be
interrogated after investigators established that there was another fire
at their kitchen, which is a few metres from the immigration offices.
The footage retrieved from Kenya Airways
headquarters showed three women in KQ uniform in the kitchen cooking
food just before the fire broke out at the same kitchen.
President Kenyatta yesterday seemed to rule out a terrorist attack as the cause of the fire.
“We can now confirm that there was no element of a
terror incident in this fire. There is no evidence of an explosion or
an improvised explosive device. This was a simple fire gone bad,” he
said on Friday.
The President also warned that anyone found culpable, including for gross negligence, would be dealt with.
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