Our website use cookies to improve and personalize your experience and to display advertisements (if any). Our website may also include cookies from third parties like Google Adsense, Google Analytics, and Youtube. By using the website, you consent to the use of cookies.

Kenyan police arrest fugitive indicted in U.S. for ivory, rhino horn trafficking

JOSEPH AKWIRI

KENYAN police arrested a fugitive wanted in the United States on charges of trafficking ivory and rhino horn, who arrived in the coastal city of Mombasa from Yemen, authorities have announced.

Abubakar Mansur Mohammed Surur was detained for alleged “ivory-related offences” after he landed in a chartered plane, the Directorate of Criminal Investigations said on Twitter.

In a June 2019 indictment, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration charged Surur and three others with conspiracy to traffic at least 190 kilograms of rhino horn and 10 tonnes of ivory worth more than $7 million. Surur was also charged with conspiracy to launder money and distribute heroin.

Advertisements

“We have been looking for him for the past two years and on Monday we got information that he would be among 33 passengers flying to Mombasa from Yemen via a Skywood aircraft,” Hamisi Masa, head of Kenya’s anti-narcotics police unit, told Reuters via telephone.

Masa said Interpol was also involved in the arrest and that Surur was being held in Mombasa port’s police station.

The DEA said last year that Surur and another Kenyan, Abdi Hussein Ahmed “Abu Khadi”, were on the run while a Liberian suspect was in custody in the United States and a Guinean suspect detained in Senegal pending extradition.

Kenya also has an extradition treaty with the United States.

“We are discussing the way forward about him because he is also needed by authorities in the U.S.,” Masa said.

READ:  One woman's fight to save Nairobi’s playgrounds and public spaces

The quartet had run their enterprise out of Uganda and neighbouring countries between 2012 and last year, according to the DEA indictment. – Thomson Reuters Foundation.


ADVERTISEMENT

Advertisements
By The African Mirror

MORE FROM THIS SECTION