In 2006 he attended an al-Shabaab training camp in
Mogadishu called “Bayt al-Jinn” where according to a jihadist obituary, he received explosives training from two senior al-Qaeda militants in Somalia,
Fazul Abdullah Mohammed and
Saleh Nabhan. He then returned to the UK to raise funds for the militant group sometime in 2007. During a trip to Lebanon in 2008, he was stopped by Lebanese counterterrorism authorities at
Beirut–Rafic Hariri International Airport, in which he was released soon after. By 2009, he had been working with his stepfather as an air conditioner and plumbing engineer and had married. However, in February 2009 he traveled with his Egyptian friend Mohammed Sakr to
Kenya; both were detained and questioned in
Mombasa. Berjawi and Sakr made their way to Nairobi. When they arrived, they stayed at the family residence of Naji Mansour, an American citizen who lives in Nyari, a wealthy area of Nairobi close to the
United Nations offices in Africa. A few weeks later, Kenyan anti-terror police raided the residence and arrested Sakr and Berjawi. After being interrogated and held without charge, they were released after four days and flown back to London, accompanied by four Kenyan intelligence officers. He was interrogated by MI5 when he arrived back in London for ten hours. As early as October that same year they returned to East Africa, Somalia this time; in November, Ugandan authorities searched for them. According to his "martyr biography," al-Berjawi attended another training camp in
Baidoa. His
UK citizenship was revoked in 2010 by
Theresa May using the British Nationality Act, which may have cleared the path for their assassination by eliminating its legal responsibility to protect their rights as citizens. on June 23, 2011, he was severely injured in a drone strike near
Kismayo orchestrated by a
Joint Special Operations Command unit known as TF 48–4, who had been tracking him since 2006 and had referred to him in a case study as "Operation Peckham". == Death ==