Police said the profiling of terror suspects found some of them had attended the Machakos madrassa |
The authorities in Kenya have closed a madrassa - or
religious school - for teaching radical Islamic ideologies.
The school
in Machakos, about 65km (40 miles) from the capital, was targeted after local
youths were detained on suspicion of joining Somali militants.
It is the
first Kenyan madrassa to be closed because of allegedly extremist teachings. A
police chief warned that others could follow. Continue...
The al-Qaeda
affiliate says they are in revenge for the presence of Kenyan troops in Somalia
and the killing of Muslims.
A year ago,
67 people were killed when the group's fighters laid siege to the upmarket
Westgate shopping centre in the capital, Nairobi .
Interior
Ministry spokesman Mwenda Njoka told the BBC the decision had been taken to
close the Daarul-Irashad centre, which opened in 1997, on the advice of the
police's CID, anti-terror and intelligence units.
The recent
arrest in the Machakos area of 21 young men suspected of being recruited for
al-Shabab first raised suspicions, he said.
The police
then profiled suspects arrested in other terror crackdowns and found that
others had passed through that madrassa, the spokesman said.
The BBC's
Abdullahi Abdi in Nairobi
says Machakos is a large town south-east of the capital with a minority Muslim
population that has not been subject to any attacks.
Source: BBC
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