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Kenya's Main Muslim Group Condemns Mombasa Bombing

The Israeli-owned Paradise Hotel in Kikambala, Kenya

NAIROBI, November 29 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Kenya's main Muslim group on Friday, November 29, condemned the bombing of Israeli targets in Mombasa and said the perpetrators "were enemies of Islam and Muslims of Kenya."

"Whoever planned and executed the bombing is definitely the number one enemy of Islam and Muslims of Kenya," the Supreme Council of Kenya Muslims (SUPKEM) said in a statement released here after Friday prayers, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.

The SUPKEM is the umbrella organization of the country's Muslim community.

"It is very unfortunate and disturbing that it is the Kenyan Muslims who suffer the aftermath of such acts," said the statement.

SUPKEM chairman Abdulghafur el-Busaidy said "we would like to assure our enemies that the Muslims of Kenya will continue to co-exist with Kenyans of other faiths as they have always done."

"The perpetrators of the attacks have no regard for human life and were enemies of Muslims of Kenya," Busaidy added.

Busaidy recalled that the Muslims were unfortunately put under tight security surveillance in 1998 after the bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi, which killed 213 people, including 12 Americans, and injured some 5,000 more.

A nearly simultaneous attack at the U.S. Embassy in Dar es Salaam killed 11 Tanzanians and injured 70 others.

"Muslim organizations in Kenya were closed down, Muslims were harassed, intimidated and called names for no fault of theirs," Busaidy said, referring to the closure of six Muslim non-governmental organizations (NGOs) on September 8, 1998, for alleged involvement in terrorist activities.

The government lifted the ban three months later from pressure by Muslim leaders and the Law Society of Kenya (LSK).

SUPKEM says Muslims make up 35 percent of Kenya's 30-million-strong population.

The last population census in 1989 put the figure at 23 percent.

Kenyan officials expressed fears Friday that anti-Israeli attacks in the Indian Ocean resort of Mombasa could undermine the tourism industry and halt its recovery from the effects of last year's terror attacks in the United States.

"The industry has been recovering very well up to now and the attack could have a detrimental impact on the delicate business," said Betty Buyu, the managing director of the state-run Kenya Tourism Board.

"The attack could reverse the significant gains achieved by the industry in the recent past," she told AFP in a telephone interview.

Sixteen people, including three attackers, died in a bomb attack on the Israeli-run Paradise Mombasa hotel on Thursday, November 28.

At the same time an Israeli passenger jet leaving Mombasa airport was almost shot down by two missiles.

"Kenya is safe. We welcome all tourists that want to come to Kenya including Israelis and those who have already booked (hotel rooms for holidays), please do come," Kenyan President Daniel Arap Moi told journalists.

"We should be alert from now henceforth and protect ourselves," said Moi.

Kenya earned 302.9 million dollars from tourism in 2001 compared to 249.4 million dollars the previous year.

Tourism worldwide slowed following the September 11 strikes in the United States.

The chairman of the Kenya Tourism Board (KTB) Raymond Matiba said his organization would try to counter the negative publicity generated by the anti-Israeli attacks in Mombasa.

"The consequences of the attack will obviously (result in) tourists shying away from visiting Kenya, but we are trying to minimize the impact," he told AFP by telephone.

"We are giving them (tourists) positive information and it's up to them to make a decision," Matiba added.

Many hotels in Mombasa, however, reported a normal flow of tourists despite Thursday's events.  

 

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