Bashir Makhtal's family say he is a business man,
not an Islamic Courts fighter
Feb 16,
2007-
More than 50
people have
been
arrested in
Kenya, near
the Somali
border and
deported
without
court
hearings,
Mohammed
Adow, Al
Jazeera's
correspondent
in Nairobi,
has
reported.
Bashir
Makhtal, a
Canadian
citizen, and
his wife's
uncle were
among those
arrested
last month
and sent
back to
Somalia.
The family
said the two
men had fled
the fighting
in Somalia
but the
Kenyan
government
sent the men
back without
a court
hearing or a
chance to
appeal.
Aziza
Osman,
Bashir's
wife, said:
"My husband
is innocent.
He is a
businessman.
He was
running away
from the
violence
when he was
arrested.
"The Kenyan
authorities
wrongfully
deported
him.
I don't know
whether he
is still
alive and
well. My
plea is that
he be
returned
safely to
me."
The Kenyan
authorities
said her
husband was
with about
100 Union of
Islamic
Courts
fighters and
their
families who
tried to
illegally
cross the
frontier.
Forced
returned
Adow said:
"So far,
half of
these
people,
including
women and
children,
have been
forced back
to
Mogadishu."
A
four-year-old
girl was
held in
police
custody for
thirty days
before being
released, he
added.
Within days
of the
arrests,
lawyers
turned up at
the Nairobi
high court
to argue
their
clients'
cases but
all the
government
provided was
a passenger
manifest.
More than 50
people were
put on a
plane and
flown out of
Kenya before
the courts
could act.
Speaking
about the
status of
the Somalis
as refugees,
Alfred Mutua,
a Kenya
government
spokesman,
said: "The
Kenyan
government
is not aware
of any
conflict
that is
posing a
danger to
the lives of
the people
of Somalia.
"If you go
to Mogadishu
today, if
you go to
Baidoa and
others,
you're not
seeing
bodies on
the streets,
you're
seeing
people
continuing
with their
daily lives.
"And Somalia
has a
government -
the
transitional
government
of Somalia
that is in
control of
the
situation."
International
law
One of the
lawyers for
the
deportees,
Harun Ndubi,
strongly
disagrees.
Ndubi said:
"The
international
refugee law,
the Geneva
convention,
has been
broken by
Kenya. The
international
human rights
law has been
broken.
"There is
international
customer law
that has
been broken
also by the
Kenya
government
taking
people ...
who are
likely to be
executed,
taking them
back,
without the
judicial
process
which they
are entitled
[to]
wherever in
the world
they are."
Kenyan
Muslims
often feel
victimised
by what the
government
says is a
campaign
against
terrorism,
Adow said.
Aziza and
her mother
said they
have heard
no word from
their loved
ones since
their
deportation.
They join a
lengthening
list of
people angry
and
frustrated
with their
government's
actions.