Arab Times

Kenya’s tourism industry braces for more misery

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MAASAI MARA/MOMBASA, Kenya, April 6, (Agencies): Hoteliers from Kenya’s Indian Ocean coast region and sprawling game park reserves said tourists have started cancelling trips to the east African nation after Islamist gunmen last week killed 148 people at a university campus.

Chilling survivor testimonie­s recounting how gunmen from Somalia’s al Shabaab militant group hunted down and killed students has shocked Kenya and dealt a fresh blow to President Uhuru Kenyatta’s plans to boost the tourism sector.

A vital part of east Africa’s biggest economy, Kenya’s tourism industry has been in decline since 2013 when al Shabaab stormed an upscale shopping mall in the capital Nairobi, killing 67 people during a bloody four-day siege.

Since then, repeat al Shabaab attacks and travel warnings issued by the likes of Britain, United States and Australia emptied Kenya’s palm-fringed beaches and forced hotels to lay off staff.

Attack

Hoteliers say the pre-dawn attack on a campus in Garissa, a remote town 200km (120 miles) from the Somalia border, far off the tourist trail, is likely to spark another wave of redundanci­es in the hospitalit­y sector.

“We were expecting tourists from UK, Germany, France, Australia and Asia continent but they cancelled their bookings when they learnt of the terror attack,” said Peter Kipeno, the owner of a luxury tented camp in Kenya’s Maasai Mara game park, nearly 600km from Garissa.

Kipeno, whose camp has a 25 bed capacity, said 19 visitors cancelled their bookings on Thursday when it became clear the raid was the deadliest attack on Kenyan soil since 1998, when al-Qaeda bombed the US embassy, killing more than 200 people.

Along Kenya’s volatile coast region, where 23 hotels have closed in the first three months of the year, hoteliers also reported cancellati­ons but said the true extent of the damage will become clearer on Tuesday when European tour operators return to work after the Easter holiday.

“The Garissa attack simply sealed our fate,” Mohammed Hersi, a veteran Kenyan hotelier and chair of the Kenya Coast Tourism Associatio­n, told Reuters in Mombasa.

Hersi said some of the management and staff at his luxury Heritage Group hotel chain had recently taken pay cuts of between 20 to 30 percent, hoping to avoid lay offs during one of the worst periods for Kenya’s tourism sector in recent memory.

“It seems we might have to go further and lay off staff, because we may not sustain even this reduced wage bill.”

Steve Keriga, assistant manager of Mara Sarova Game Camps, said the impact would be felt from this week and is worried about the outlook for the busiest part of the year.

“The attack might affect the July-October peak season,” he said, a reference to the annual wildebeest migration between Tanzania and Kenya in the Maasai Mara reserve.

Al Shabaab militants have killed over 400 people in Kenya since April 2013 with the government struggling to stop fighters and weapons coming across the 700 km border with Somalia.

Kenya has shown no inclinatio­n to pull out of Somalia where its troops, part of an UN-backed African Union peacekeepi­ng mission, have wrestled swathes of territory from the Islamist group.

Western diplomats, however, say this loss of territory has not weakened al Shabaab’s capacity to carry out one-off guerilla-style attacks in native Somalia or further abroad.

Kenya said its air force bombed two al Shabaab camps in Somalia on Sunday to try and weaken the group.

In the capital Nairobi, where local media have become increasing­ly critical of what they call a bungled security response to the Garissa attack, dozens of grieving families are still trying to identify bodies at the city’s mortuary.

The attack has piled pressure on Kenyatta, who on taking office in April 2013 vowed to triple tourist numbers to 5 million annually within five years, and get economic growth into double figures to lift millions out of poverty.

Kenya recently also set up a special tourism “task force” to devise a plan to lure tourists back to the east African nation.

“The Garissa attacks have dented our image more as a tourist destinatio­n in the eyes of the internatio­nal community and our initial efforts to clean up our image have now been rendered futile,” said Sam Ikwaye, head of the coastal region’s Kenya Associatio­n of Hotel Keepers and Caterers.

The timing of the Garissa attack was also embarrassi­ng for Kenyatta, who a day earlier had berated Britain and Australia for issuing travel warnings for Kenya due to security threats.

“The travel advisories we have been complainin­g about and saying they are unnecessar­y, are being justified by these consistent attacks. What other language can we use now to convince tourists? We are not giving up, but there is little hope either,” said Hersi.

Kenya authoritie­s have named one of the gunmen who killed 148 people in a university massacre as an ethnic Somali Kenyan national and law graduate, highlighti­ng the alQaeda-linked Shebab’s ability to recruit within the country.

Interior ministry spokesman Mwenda Njoka said high-flying Abdirahim Abdullahi was “a university of Nairobi law graduate and described by a person who knows him well as a brilliant upcoming lawyer”.

The spokesman said Abdullahi’s father, a local official in the northeaste­rn county of Mandera, had “reported to the authoritie­s that his son had gone missing and suspected the boy had gone to Somalia”.

Tendencies

Describing Abdullahi as an A-grade student, Njoka said it was “critical that parents whose children go missing or show tendencies of having been exposed to violent extremism report to authoritie­s”.

Kenya entered the second of three days of national mourning on Monday for those killed in last week’s massacre, the vast majority of whom were students.

Hundreds had packed Nairobi’s Anglican cathedral on Sunday, where Archbishop Eliud Wabukala said Easter services were overshadow­ed by “great and terrible evil” as police patrolled outside.

“These terrorists want to cause divisions in our society, but we shall tell them, ‘You will never prevail’,” the archbishop said.

Somalia’s Shebab militants attacked the university in the northeaste­rn town of Garissa at dawn on Thursday, lining up non-Muslim students for execution in what President Uhuru Kenyatta described as a “barbaric medieval slaughter”.

Although Kenyatta has vowed to retaliate “in the severest way possible”, there have also been calls for national unity.

He said people’s “justified anger” should not lead to “the victimisat­ion of anyone” — a clear reference to Kenya’s large Muslim and Somali minorities in a country where 80 percent of the population is Christian.

The massacre, Kenya’s deadliest attack since the 1998 bombing of the US embassy in Nairobi, claimed the lives of 142 students, three police officers and three soldiers.

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