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Islamic centre in Garissa shut over leadership wrangles

The leadership wrangles have since escalated to clan conflicts leaving several people injured.

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by KNA

News19 August 2025 - 15:30
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In Summary


  • Quba Islamic Centre sits on approximately 250 acres of land on the outskirts of Garissa town near Modika.
  • The centre has been facing leadership disagreements since April this year, with reconciliation efforts by the local leaders and security officials turning futile.

Quba Islamic Centre Mosque where faithful from across the country come to worship, meditate and receive religious teachings/KNA

Garissa County Security and Intelligence Committee has indefinitely closed down Quba Islamic Centre following leadership wrangles that have since escalated to clan conflicts, leaving several people injured.

Quba Islamic Centre, which sits on approximately 250 acres of land in the outskirts of Garissa town near Modika, has been facing leadership disagreements since April this year, with reconciliation efforts by the local leaders and security officials turning futile.

The conflicting teams, one consisting of the older generation, who were mainly the founders and the other consisting of middle-aged members, have been holding unwavering opinions, stalling any reconciliation efforts so far.

While announcing the closure after leading his security team to the centre, Garissa County Commissioner, Mohamed Mwabudzo, said that the decision had been reached in consultation with his security team, local political leaders and the leadership of the Supreme Council of Kenya Muslims (SUPKEM) Garissa branch.

“We have closed down this place until we get a solution to the issues arising. We will take whatever time to find solutions, but the two groups must vacate this place today,” Mwabudzo declared.

“We did not make this decision lightly since this is a place of worship. It is a place to find comfort before God and find peace, but we must shut it down because of the fear that this conflict has caused the whole county of Garissa,’’ he added.

Garissa branch SUPKEM chairperson, Sheikh Abdullahi Salat, said that it was shameful that the religious people who were supposed to bring people together were now dividing them.

Sheikh Abdullahi Salat reiterated that SUPKEM was fully supporting the government’s move to shut the place down and called for the arrest of all those fueling the conflicts.

“When leaders start fighting, the government must step in. I have spoken to both teams, and I have told them this is a place of worship, and peace must be found. As SUPKEM, we have been in the forefront of defending Islamic institutions against government interference, but now you are the ones inviting the government in,” Salat said.

“We will not allow Muslims to fight each other here. Some people have already been injured, and we cannot watch you fight because it is our responsibility to make sure that there is peace here and allow the people who want to pray to have modest time,” he added.

Salat further noted that the Quba Islamic Centre was not personal property but a place for all Muslims from all parts of the country.

“If you want to fight, you will vacate this place and fight in other places. The government will take over here and ensure there is peace but if you want to reconcile, we will ask the government to stay away so that you solve your issues,” he said.

A few of the members we spoke to distanced themselves from the leadership conflict, noting that they supported the government’s move to shut down the place.

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