LARVIK, Norway — The trail in the investigation into the deadly attack on a Kenyan shopping mall leads all the way to Scandinavia, where the Norwegian police have identified a man who may have been among the assailants.
Investigators are questioning relatives and friends of Hassan Abdi Dhuhulow, a Norwegian citizen born in Somalia, to try to determine whether he was one of the four militants captured on surveillance footage inside the shopping mall, calmly killing shoppers on a Saturday afternoon last month.
His sister, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said in an interview that officers from the Norwegian security police had asked her whether her brother had placed calls from Nairobi, including from the Westgate shopping mall, during the siege. She said that he had not and that the family was unaware of any role he might have played in the attack.
"My mother and father and me, we don't even know if he is dead or alive," she said. "We are waiting for the whole issue to become clearer."
A man with the same name as Mr. Dhuhulow was arrested in Somalia in connection with the murder of a radio journalist but was freed by a military tribunal for lack of evidence in March.
In 2009, Mr. Dhuhulow, 23, began going on what his sister called "long vacations" to Somalia. Contact with the family was sporadic and she could not remember whether she had last spoken to him last year or the year before. "My brother leads a different life than me," she said.
The Norwegian Police Security Service said in a statement last week that it had received information that a Norwegian citizen of Somali origin may have been involved in "the planning and execution of the attack" in late September, when militants stormed the mall and killed more than 60 men, women and children. The Norwegians sent investigators to Nairobi to work with Kenyan security services on the investigation.
The Somali militant group the Shabab claimed responsibility. The Kenyan authorities initially said 10 to 15 assailants had been involved in the assault. Officials with knowledge of the investigation now say that the number was no more than six and may be as few as the four captured on the surveillance tapes.
Kenyan officials released four names, but none of them was Mr. Dhuhulow's, and officials with knowledge of the investigation said later that they were believed to be noms de guerre and not birth names.
Norway has come increasingly into focus as investigators from Kenya, the United States, Norway and elsewhere work to try to piece together the Shabab's international network. Navy SEALs staged an unsuccessful raid in the Somali coastal town of Baraawe earlier this month to try to capture a Shabab mastermind, Abdikadir Mohamed Abdikadir, also known as Ikrima. Mr. Abdikadir is believed to have lived in Norway as an asylum seeker between 2004 and 2008.
More and more video footage of the attack has leaked out in the weeks since the siege ended. CNN released disturbing clips on Thursday that showed terrified shoppers running for their lives while the killers stalked them, leaving victims in pools of blood on the mall floor.
Mr. Dhuhulow's sister said the police believed he had called the family from inside the shopping mall, a version of events she contested. "They think so because it said so in some Kenyan newspaper," she said. "They do not have this information confirmed. He certainly did not call anyone in the family; we would have known if he did."
Larvik is a small city on the Norwegian east coast south of Oslo, with around 43,000 inhabitants. Mr. Dhuhulow attended Thor Heyerdahl High School here until 2009, according to Stine Indhal, an administrator at the school, concentrating on natural sciences and mathematics.
Kristina Sandbrekkene Olsen, 22, who went to the school at the same time as Mr. Dhuhulow but did not remember him specifically, said she had many Muslim friends from Chechnya and Kosovo as well as Somalia. "Terrorism was never a topic among any of us, and religion wasn't a big subject either," Ms. Olsen said.
According to his sister, Mr. Dhuhulow stayed in touch with the family in Norway only occasionally after moving to Somalia. "It's still hard to believe," she said. "I can't bear the thought of this actually being true, it's just too much come to terms with."
Henrik Pryser Libell reported from Larvik, Norway, and Nicholas Kulish from Nairobi, Kenya.
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