Pubdate: Fri, 28 May 2004 Source: East African Standard, The (Kenya) Copyright: 2004 The East African Standard Contact: http://www.eastandard.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1743 Author: Athman Amran AKASHAS 'BOUGHT NYASEDA A HOUSE' Nairobi Former Police Commissioner Edwin Nyaseda was bought a house at Savannah Estate in Nairobi by late drug baron Ibrahim Akasha, a witness told a tribunal investigating suspended Court of Appeal judges. Mohamed Ghani Taib yesterday told the tribunal investigating the conduct of suspended judge Philip Waki that Nyaseda began working for the Akashas in the early 1990s when the two used to escort containers of drugs to and from various points in Mombasa. "I was even surprised when I learnt from Kamiti (Prison) that Nyaseda was appointed a police commissioner," Taib, who is serving a 15-year sentence for drug trafficking said. The witness, who has been stood down several times to give way for other witnesses, was being cross-examined by Nyaseda's lawyer Patrick Jaleny. Taib said the last time he was with Nyaseda was in December 1999, when he sent Sh50,000 and a two bottles of whisky to Nyaseda's house as a Christmas present from Akasha. He said he started trafficking drugs with Nyaseda when the latter was Deputy Provincial Criminal Investigations Officer in Mombasa. Taib said there was a woman who could testify that they had lunch at one time in Nyaseda's house and that he (Nyaseda) used to visit his house several times and even ate lunch there. Taib indicated that the woman who cooked lunch for them at Nyaseda's residence could be called to testify. Taib: All my wives are known to Nyaseda, They even cooked food for him. Jaleny: Do you have documentary evidence to show that you and Nyaseda were together? Taib: In drug trafficking you can't have documents. You are just given bribes and you work. Jaleny: You are an incorrigible, shameless liar who is behaving like a drowning man ... Taib: You have been paid to come to talk like that but I have not been paid. Taib said Nyaseda allegedly covered up for those involved in the 4.7 tonnes of hashish that was impounded in a Nyali House in Mombasa. "He did not even want to arrest the owner of the house in which the drug haul was discovered," Taib charged. Taib had previously told the tribunal that Waki and former Nairobi Chief Magistrate Boaz Olao had received a Sh4 million bribe from Baktash Akasha at Kentmere Club in Limuru in 2000, to help in the case. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D