July 3, 2024

Two Cuban doctors kidnapped in Kenya have died; Al-Shabab 

3 min read
Two Cuban doctors kidnapped in Kenya have died; Al-Shabab

Al-Shabab claims the two Cuban doctors it kidnapped in Kenya and held captive in Somalia have died

Al-Shabab claims the two Cuban doctors it kidnapped in Kenya and held captive in Somalia have died.

The Cuban Foreign Ministry warned this Saturday that the reports on the death of Cuban doctors Assel Herrera Correa and Landy Rodríguez, kidnapped in Kenya in 2019, “have not been confirmed.” 

This comes after the jihadist group Al Shabab, which held both health workers, released a statement on X which claims that both died during a bombing attributed to the United States that occurred on Thursday, February 15 in Somalia.

“The Cuban authorities remain in permanent communication with their Kenyan and Somali counterparts, and our people will be immediately informed,” said the Foreign Ministry, which stressed that all the information circulating is, so far, “unofficial.”

Al Shabab also published two photographs of Herrera Correa’s alleged corpse, with his naked torso and traces of blood on his body, after the attack by American drones “at 12:10 am” on the Somali town of Jilib. 

Among the casualties of the alleged bombing were the two “Cuban prisoners” kidnapped in Mandera, Kenya.

Al Shabab also accuses the United States of targeting its prisoners and describes that, in previous years, it has attacked at least two enclaves of the jihadist group with this objective.

Rodríguez and Herrera Correa were kidnapped on April 12, 2019, in Mandera, bordering Somalia, and the target of jihadist attacks in the past. 

The two doctors were traveling, as was their custom, in a convoy to the Mandera hospital, protected by armed escorts, when they were intercepted after a shooting in which one of the police officers guarding them was killed.

Until 2022, the Government of Kenya always stated that steps were being made to rescue the doctors, efforts that, to date, have been unsuccessful. 

Kenya needs leaders who focus on the future, not the past – Uhuru Kenyatta

Police officers will no longer be allowed to own bars; DP Gachagua

DP Gachagua reaches out to Uhuru Kenyatta over Mt Kenya unity

Uhuru Kenyatta offers full scholarship to the son of late police boss, King’ori Mwangi

Uhuru Kenyatta abruptly leaves funeral as DP Gachagua was making his way

Since the arrival of William Ruto to the Kenyan Presidency in September of that year, the Executive has not publicly pronounced on the case. 

Official silence has also prevailed in neighboring Somalia, where the two doctors supposedly remain captive.

“Nobody knows the current whereabouts of the two Cuban doctors. We also do not have up-to-date information about the current state of their well-being,” a source from the Somali National Intelligence and Security Agency (NISA) told EFE in April 2023, on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak to the media.

“It is believed that they are still held somewhere in an Al Shabab bastion since their kidnapping,” the source said. “We don’t have any more details at the moment,” he insisted, “and nothing new has emerged in the last two years.”

Herrera Correa and Rodríguez were part of a contingent of 100 Cuban professionals who arrived in Kenya in 2018, as part of a bilateral agreement to improve access to specialized health services in the African country.

Also read,

Man stabs wife to death before committing suicide

Government to remove 20,000 ‘ghost’ workers from payroll

Somali president accuses Ethiopia security of blocking his access to AU Summit 

Security whisky away an elderly man attempting to reach out to DP Gachagua

Ruto to lead reforms at AU Commission

ODM party calls for a crisis meeting after Raila AU bid

Follow us

FaceBook

Telegram

error: Content is protected !!