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Kenya Refuses to Give Israel Evidence From Attacks

There is tension between the Kenyan and Israeli investigators

KIKAMBALA, Kenya, December 2 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – Kenya has refused to hand any evidence from last week’s attacks on an Israeli-owned hotel and an Israeli jetliner over to Israel.

According to Israeli daily newspaper, Ha’aretz, the dispute threatened to delay the investigation into the attacks. American and Israeli leaders both questioned Kenya’s ability to conduct a thorough probe.

Kenyan police officials said Israeli authorities want to take pieces from a four-wheel-drive Mitsubishi Pajero that exploded outside the hotel on Thursday, killing 10 Kenyans, three Israelis and the bombers inside, Ha’aretz reported.

Israel also wants the launchers and missile casings from shoulder-launched rockets believed used in the attempt to shoot down the Israeli charter plane, the paper added.

Kenyan bomb specialist Charles Jamu said “None of this evidence is going back to Israel. This evidence is our responsibility.”

Raanan Gissin, spokesman for Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, that Kenya had been cooperating “up to now,” but that the Kenyans weren’t prepared for the investigation.

They were not geared to this kind of a threat or they don’t have the necessary resources or technological capabilities that would enable them to deal with that,” Gissin said.

William Lang’at, the lead investigator, said Israeli bomb experts had asked to “take some of the exhibits back home for forensic examination” and the request “will be decided in due course.”

Kenya is leading the probe into last Thursday’s bombing of an Israeli-owned hotel here and a failed missile attack on an Israeli charter plane taking off from nearby Mombasa airport minutes earlier, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.

However, Israeli and U.S. experts have joined the investigation.

Lang’at said the Kenyans had all the evidence in their possession. "We have got everything. There's nothing they have taken."

The Kenyans say they have found parts of the bomb that blew up the Paradise hotel as well as two shoulder-held missile launchers used in the attack on the charter plane leaving Mombasa airport minutes earlier.

However, AFP journalists have seen the Israelis picking up debris from the gutted hotel in Kikambala on the Indian Ocean coast.

On Sunday, when a Kenyan investigator dropped and tried to pick up two metal pieces believed to have been used in the bomb, two Israelis grabbed them from his hands and put them in a plastic bag which they kept.

The incident revealed a certain tension between the Kenyan and Israeli investigators, who appeared uneasy over how the Kenyans were handling the evidence.

Since around two dozen Israeli bomb experts and army officers arrived here last Thursday, Israelis have been searching the site at will and gathering body parts and debris into bags.

The Kenyans have done nothing to stop them, an AFP correspondent said.

The Kenyan and Israeli investigators were again on the hotel grounds on Monday before they suddenly left. A guard at the scene told AFP they were “called back for a briefing in Mombasa.”

No other details were available.

Kenyan police reported on Friday that witnesses said people who may have fired the missiles fled in a white all-terrain Mitsibushi Pajero, but there was no word yet whether they have found the car.

The car that rammed the Paradise hotel here was a green Mitsibushi Pajero, and police were “still searching for the Mitsubishi Pajero pieces scattered all around in order to reconstruct it,” Lang’at said Sunday.

The bombing occurred, witnesses said, when three men slammed a four-wheel drive vehicle packed with explosives into the beach hotel just as a party of Israeli tourists was arriving.

Investigators on Sunday held up two pieces of metal they said belonged to at least one gas cylinder which was used in the car bomb.

Lang’at also said the police were “still looking for parts of the bodies of the terrorists,” and that no DNA testing had been done as of Sunday afternoon.

Meanwhile, Lang’at said the police were still holding six Pakistanis and four Somalis for questioning about the bombing, but has not named them as suspects.

Kenya has not ruled out that Osama bin Laden’s Al-Qaeda network is involved in the attack, but said it has nothing to link the 10 detainees to either the attacks here or Al-Qaeda.

Israeli Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz said Sunday that although there was as yet no concrete evidence directly linking Al-Qaeda with the attacks, there were “signs” that indicated that Bin Laden’s group was behind them, Ha’aretz reported.

Kenyan Internal Security Minister Julius Sunkuli told a news conference that of the 12 detainees, all foreigners, a U.S. and a Spanish national “appear to have the least connection” to the attacks, the paper added.

Authorities later freed the two after questioning. The American and Spaniard were held after trying to check out of another hotel in the area about two hours after the blast.  

 

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