Four suspects detained over JKIA cocaine trafficking syndicate


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Four suspects arraigned at the JKIA Law Courts on October 7th,
linked to a narcotics trafficking syndicate operating through airport, will be
detained for 13 days.
This follows a series of operations between October 5th and
7th, 2025, by the Multi-Agency Transnational Organised Crime Unit (TOCU),
arresting the four individuals implicated in the smuggling of cocaine destined
for both local and international markets.
The key suspects include Rishad Abdulrahim Sheikh, identified
as the head of the syndicate, and Muamar Mutua Mohammed, the syndicate’s
logistician responsible for coordinating drug movement through JKIA.
The arrests come just days after a media exposé revealed glaring security lapses at JKIA, showing how narcotics were trafficked under the watch of surveillance cameras and airport personnel.
The exposé raised serious questions about internal complicity
and operational oversight at one of East Africa’s busiest airports.
Investigators have connected the local arrests to an
international case involving Jesse Da Mata Dos Santos, a British national
recently detained in London with 20 kilograms of cocaine.
According to court affidavits, Jesse is suspected to have
direct ties to Rishad Sheikh, who holds dual Kenyan-British citizenship.
Another suspect, Hajinur Yussuf Mohamed, also a British national, is believed
to be Sheikh’s cousin.
Sheikh and Hajinur were tracked to Nyali Centre Mall in
Mombasa County. Additional suspects — Adam Omari, Muamar Mutua Mohammed, Hajinur
Yussuf Mohamed, and Rishad Abdulrahim Sheikh — were apprehended at an apartment
in Utawala, Nairobi County.
During the operation, detectives recovered two packages
suspected to contain narcotics and seven mobile phones, now undergoing forensic
analysis to trace communications and logistics.
Samples from the seized substances are being weighed and
chemically profiled to establish links to previous trafficking incidents.
Authorities in the United Kingdom are currently interrogating
Jesse Da Mata Dos Santos.
Legal assistance requests have been initiated to secure
physical exhibits and digital evidence believed to be domiciled in the UK.
These materials are expected to play a crucial role in
unravelling the full scope of the transnational network.
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