Businessman charged with stealing Sh296 million from wholesale shop

An employee at a wholesale shop in Nairobi has been charged with stealing Sh296 million between 2018 and 2025. Mohamed Osman Abdile, also the owner of Fatzam Enterprises Limited, is accused of hiding the funds in various bank accounts. The court has granted him bail of Sh3 million.

Mohamed Osman Abdile, an employee at a wholesale shop, has been charged by the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) with stealing Sh296,069,084 from Abdi Mohamed Ali between January 1, 2018, and September 30, 2024. Abdile, who owns Fatzam Enterprises Limited (FEL), is accused of concealing the funds in accounts at Kenya Commercial Bank (KCB), Absa Bank, and Equity Bank Limited (EBL) branches in Eastleigh, Nairobi.

According to the charges, Abdile and his associate Hussein Ibrahim Barre, who did not appear in court, used methods such as ordering spaghetti from Arabian Milling & Food Company to hide the crime. The money was transferred to accounts of other companies, including Gigi International Limited and Marray and Sons Venture Limited. Officers from the Banking Fraud Unit (BFU) of the Central Bank of Kenya discovered over Sh116 million in FEL's accounts, and Abdile refused to explain Sh107 million.

On March 12, 2024, Abdile was found with Sh4,759,029 in FEL's KCB account, alleged to be from illicit sources. He denied 30 counts, including conspiracy, theft, and handling stolen property. Abdile claimed the funds came from his work at Mega Shopping Mall.

In court, Abdile applied for bail, stating he would not flee and has invested heavily in the country. The prosecution did not oppose, and the magistrate granted Sh3 million bail with one surety, plus Sh2 million in cash. The case will be mentioned again in two weeks.

Relaterede artikler

Suspended Sgt. Fannie Nkosi in Pretoria court facing charges; evidence includes firearms, cash, and robbery dockets from home raid.
Billede genereret af AI

Suspended sergeant Fannie Nkosi faces charges after home raid

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI

Suspended Sergeant Fannie Nkosi of Gauteng’s Organised Crime Unit appeared in Pretoria North Magistrates’ Court on 7 April 2026, facing charges including possession of unlicensed ammunition and defeating the ends of justice. Police raided his home last week, finding firearms, cash and six undetected case dockets related to cash-in-transit robberies. His bail application was postponed to 13 April 2026.

An imam from a Malindi mosque, Omar Athman Omar, has been charged with defrauding believer Mohamed Salim Bahlewa of Sh774,000 by promising to take him on Hajj to Mecca during Ramadan. The religious leader denied the charges and sought bail, claiming he is a respected figure unlikely to engage in corruption. Milimani Court remanded him until February 10, 2026.

Rapporteret af AI

A Mombasa court has charged a Turkish businessman with membership in the Al-Shabaab terrorist group and other terrorism-related offenses, including illegal firearm possession. He and his co-accused were released on bond, with their pretrial hearing set for February 19, 2026. The case follows a recent suspected Al-Shabaab attack in Garissa.

Five individuals face charges from Ethiopia's Federal Anti-Corruption Commission for fraudulently receiving over 6 million birr in a digital land certificate issuance scam at Addis Ababa Land Development Bureau. The charges under Article 4 were filed at the Federal High Court Lideta Division 5.

Rapporteret af AI

The High Court of West Shewa Zone in Oromia Region has sentenced a man to prison for posing as a disabled aid recipient from Adara to solicit money. The accused, Mika'as Niguse, received nine years of rigorous imprisonment and a 1,000 Birr fine. The child used in the scheme was returned to his family.

In an update to his detention reported on December 10, 2025, former Nigerian Attorney-General Abubakar Malami has denied Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) allegations of operating 46 bank accounts linked to recovered loot from Gen. Sani Abacha. The EFCC states detention results from unmet bail conditions in probes into money laundering, abuse of office, and terrorism financing, while supporters like Atiku Abubakar and the African Democratic Congress decry political persecution. Malami claims only six known accounts and full cooperation.

Rapporteret af AI

The Federal Attorney for Criminal Cases has charged two lawyers with forging court decisions and improper rulings in a bribery matter. The charges relate to a dispute over an 84 million birr coffee farm. The indictment was filed in Addis Ababa's Federal High Court.

 

 

 

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis