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Govt extradites 4 drug smuggling suspects to the US

Over the last two years the extradition request has foundered in Kenya's courts while the four suspects have been out on bail.

Kenyan brothers Baktash (2L) and Ibrahim Akasha (R) were arrested in November 2014, along with Indian national Vijaygiri Goswami and Pakistani citizen Gulam Hussein, following a sting by the US Drug Enforcement Administration

Kenyan brothers Baktash and Ibrahim Akasha were arrested in November 2014, along with Indian national Vijaygiri Goswami and Pakistani citizen Gulam Hussein, following a sting by the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) which infiltrated the Mombasa-based organisation.

East Africa is emerging as a key staging post in the international heroin trade and US officials believe the Akashas are a crucial link in a supply chain that connects Afghanistan's poppy fields with consumers in Europe and the US.

"They were deported last night on a private charter plane and we expect them to be arraigned in court in the US to stand trial for smuggling drugs," said a senior Kenyan anti-narcotics officer on condition of anonymity.

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Local media on Tuesday also reported their extradition, though their lawyer Cliff Ombeta said he had not been informed and did not know where they were.

Ombeta said if they had been sent to the US, "then consequences must follow because there is an order in the lower court that says they should not be removed from this jurisdiction".

An explanation was needed if they had been moved, he added.

According to a US indictment, Ibrahim Akasha personally delivered 99 kilos of heroin and two kilos of methamphetamine to undercover agents. Meetings and conversations were recorded.

The US indictment describes Baktash Akasha as "the leader of an organised crime family in Kenya" and his younger brother Ibrahim as his "deputy".

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It also describes "Old Man" Hussein as "the head of a transportation network that distributes massive quantities of narcotics throughout the Middle East and Africa", while "Vicky" Goswami "manages the Akasha Organisation's drug business".

The men are accused of conspiring to import pure "white crystal" heroin into the US at a knock-down price of around $10,000 (9,100 euros) a kilo.

US officials believe the Akasha brothers are continuing the business of their late father, also named Ibrahim, who was described in a secret 2006 US diplomatic cable published by WikiLeaks as a "drug baron".

He was killed in Amsterdam -- shot four times by a bicycle-riding assassin -- in May 2000 as he took a morning stroll with his wife along Blood Street in the city's red light district.

President Uhuru Kenyatta said Tuesday that Kenya must "fight the war on drugs".

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"We have said we are no longer going to target those small peddlers. We are going for the real drug dealers," Kenyatta said, without specifying whether he was referring to the Akasha case.

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