Spreading the net: Somali Islamists now target Kenyan recruits

* Al Shabaab's new recruits a problem for security forces

* Young men lured with offers of cash and khat

* Women also targeted by Islamist group

By Duncan Miriri

ISIOLO, Kenya, May 17 (Reuters) - A youth recruited while watching football. A Catholic school graduate. Girls desperate for cash and jobs.

The al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab insurgency is using some unconventional accomplices to step up attacks beyond Somalia's borders.

January's assault on an office and hotel complex in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, was the first to be led by a someone who is not an ethnic Somali since al Shabaab began major cross-border operations in 2010. Twenty-one people were killed.

The attack's leader, Ali Salim Gichunge, nicknamed Farouk, was a 26-year-old Kenyan who attended a Catholic school and whose largely Christian Meru ethnic group has no ties to Somalia. He led four other assailants, including at least one non-Somali used as a suicide bomber, Kenyan security officials said. All died in the attack.

They are among a growing number of Kenyans with no family links to Somalia drafted by the militants in recent years, according to relatives, security officials and analysts.

Widespread poverty and unemployment mean al Shabaab can tempt recruits by offering cash or promises of work, researchers who interviewed defectors said. Even small gifts have lured some young men, their families said.

These new recruits have expanded the militants' reach and complicated efforts by Kenyan security forces to thwart them.

"In the past, the security forces concentrated their efforts in parts of the country that are Muslim majority, Muslim-dominated," said Murithi Mutiga, a project director for the International Crisis Group think-tank. "Now it’s much harder because al Shabaab has shown its adaptability by recruiting from outside the traditional areas."

At the same time, al Shabaab has expanded operations from Somalia into East Africa, where it has shown it can hit high-profile targets, such as the offices of Western multinational companies.

FOOTBALL, DRUGS AND MOTORBIKES

Gichunge, the son of a Kenyan military officer, was radicalised while working at a hotel Internet cafe in Isiolo town, his sister told Reuters.

"It all started there. He was able to access new materials online, go to Facebook. He started studying Arabic language and all sorts of things," Amina Sharif said.

His Muslim family had sent him to a mission school in Isiolo, a dusty northern town that is a gateway to three vast, arid counties neighbouring Somalia.

Many in Isiolo were reluctant to discuss him, fearing police attention. But some said al Shabaab recruiters had been targeting young, unemployed men from outside the ethnic Somali community there for years.