Pubdate: Sat, 05 Jun 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 HASHISH HAUL WAS NEVER DESTROYED, TRIBUNAL TOLD Nairobi The 4.7 tonnes of hashish impounded from a house in Nyali, Mombasa, in 2000 was never destroyed, a tribunal investigating the conduct of suspended Court of Appeal judge Philip Waki heard yesterday. Instead, what was destroyed under the supervision of former Nairobi Chief Magistrate Boaz Olao was heroin. The number of sacks destroyed was also less than those indicated in the Occurrence Book at Bamburi Police Station. Olao, who is now Thika Chief Magistrate, had convicted Mohamed Ghani Taib and another of trafficking in hashish but freed two sons of the late drug baron Ibrahim Akasha, Kamaldin and Baktash for lack of evidence. Olao was being cross-examined by Lead Counsel Mbuthi Gathenji at the tribunal probing suspended Court of Appeal judges and chaired by retired Appeal Court judge Akilano Akiwumi. Taib recently claimed that Olao received a Sh4 million bribe from Baktash on May 27, 2000, to influence the outcome of the drug trafficking case before him at the Nairobi High Court. Taib alleged that Olao was with Waki, who received the money at the Kentmere Club in Limuru. He said Waki put the money in a red Peugeot car parked at the club parking bay. Olao has since confirmed to the tribunal that he has a car of similar make and colour. Court documents relating to cases against Taib, the two Akasha sons and six others indicated that a Government analyst had identified the drugs as hashish. Yet in the same files, Taib was sentenced to serve 15 years in prison for trafficking in heroin. "If what was destroyed was heroin, the charge is not sustainable if the substance was hashish," Gathenji said. Gathenji also read from the Olao's ruling that while Kamaldin was freed from remand custody in Malindi on March 15, 2000, when the trafficking took place, the same did not apply for Taib who was in police custody in Mombasa on the same day. The State Counsel also produced excerpts from the files showing that Olao had allowed a person with a different name to withdraw Taib's Sh10 million bond which he (Taib) and others had been given on May 19, 2000. Taib had earlier testified that the bond was withdrawn after he quarrelled with Baktash and Kamaldin over allegations that he had caused their father's death after telling police of the whereabouts of the 4.7 tonnes of hashish. Instead of Maurice Mutugi Githenji, who had stood surety for Taib, Olao allowed Wallace Muturi Githinji to withdraw the bond. Taib had testified that it was the Akasha's who influenced the withdrawal of the bond after the quarrel during the burial ceremony of Ibrahim Akasha at Nyali in Mombasa. Githenji also drew the attention of the Akiwumi tribunal that there was no evidence in the court documents showing that sureties for Baktash were examined. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake