[wanabidii] Fire shuts Kenya's main airport, chokes regional gateway

Wednesday, August 07, 2013

Good People,
This Uhuru/Ruto Government has failed. This calls for quick
International FBI investigation on who, how and why JKIA
Airport is burned, the Kismayu is being annexed for hand-
over before public referendum is consulted and a business
man was hacked to death in Kasipul Kabondo with Police
compromised messing-up with evidence ........just as well
when Kamlesh Patni shop was vandalized to the ground.
We are more intelligent than to be fooled. This is not the
way to solve matters.
More questions than answers will worsen matters and before
serious genocide with hooliganism sets in, damage control
must be constituted and Justice must prevail........so people
get to know exactly who is in the game to destroy Kenya and
the whole of Africa.
Wake-up people, wake up !!!
Judy Miriga
Diaspora Spokesperson
Executive Director
Confederation Council Foundation for Africa Inc.,
USA
http://socioeconomicforum50.blogspot.com

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M-MhSidZlLI

 

Fire shuts Kenya's main airport, chokes regional gateway

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Play video

Drazen Jorgic 28 minutes ago

By Drazen Jorgic

NAIROBI (Reuters) - A fire engulfed Kenya's main airport on Wednesday, forcing the indefinite suspension of international passenger flights and choking a vital travel gateway to east Africa.

The blaze lit up the early morning sky, the billowing clouds of black smoke engulfing the terminal buildings visible from miles away.

The intense heat repeatedly drove back firefighters who battled for five hours to put out the fire, the worst on record at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport, east Africa's busiest.

Michael Kamau, cabinet secretary for transport said an investigation into the fire would start immediately but that it was too early to speculate on the cause.

The blaze stranded thousands of passengers at the airport and exporters of perishable produce, mainly flowers, feared for their export-driven business, a leading source of foreign exchange for Kenya alongside tea exports and tourism.

"This is disastrous," Jane Ngige, chief executive officer of exporters association Kenya Flower Council, told Reuters.

There were no immediate reports of casualties from the fire, which started in the arrivals and immigration area. Business travellers and tourists were diverted to other airports in the region.

Shares in Kenya Airways, which uses the airport as its main hub, fell 2 percent. Foreign carriers using the terminal include Emirates, British Airways, Qatar, KLM), Turkish Airways, South African Airlines and Ethiopian airlines.

Kenyan authorities said domestic flights and international cargo flights would resume later on Wednesday. Plans for international flights would be announced later.

"Right now we've allowed the cargo to come in. Fruits, flower are coming in and are being processed. We hope we will be able to resume domestic flights," Kamau said.

ROOF COLLAPSE

Inside the gutted building, neat lines of metal trolleys with melted plastic handles were the only clear reminder that the building - whose roof partially collapsed - was once an airport terminal.

Some passengers searched for their luggage amid the charred ruins while outside, staff from Western embassies waved their national flags to attract passengers looking for a route home or a place to stay.

The fire coincided with the 15th anniversary of a twin attacks by Islamist militants on the United States embassy in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam, the commercial capital of neighbouring Tanzania.

But security analysts said there was as yet no indication of any link to Islamist militants that Kenyan soldiers are battling in neighbouring Somalia as part of an African Union force.

"It doesn't bear the hallmarks of an al Shabaab operation but one never knows. It might be something new," said a regional security analyst, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The fire was a major blow to Kenya right at the start of the busiest period of the tourism season, a key sector for the Kenyan economy and an important source of foreign currency earnings.

Tourists to the world famous Masai Mara Game Reserve had canceled their bookings, tour operators said.

Flights were diverted to Kenya's port city of Mombasa. Plans were underway to divert other flights to Eldoret in the northwest and Kisumu in the west, as well as to neighbouring countries including Uganda, Tanzania and Rwanda.

Passengers faced bus trips of hundreds of miles to reach the Kenyan capital.

"I had two appointments today in Nairobi which I have missed because of this," Susan Eklow, 42, from Sweden told Reuters in Mombasa.

"We haven't been told anything except to hang around here as a solution was sought," said Muses Heuwaggen, 45, a German tourist in Mombasa headed to Naivasha in the scenic Rift Valley.

(Additional reporting by Kevin Mwanza and Duncan Miriri and Richard Lough in Nairobi, Joseph Akwiri in Mombasa, John Tompo in Narok, Jenny Clover in Kigali and Elias Biryabarema in Kampala; Writing by James Macharia; Editing by Jon Boyle)

Kenya says ready to hand over control of Somali port city

Drazen Jorgic 5 hours ago
(Blank Headline Received)
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View gallery
A soldier from Somalia's Ras-Kamboni paramilitary group stands guard as he monitors activities at the …
By Drazen Jorgic
NAIROBI (Reuters) - Kenya said on Tuesday it was ready to hand control of the strategic Somali port city of Kismayu to a recognised leader, but warned that a chaotic exit would embolden al Qaeda-linked insurgents in southern Somalia.
Kenyan troops, as part of an African Union peacekeeping force, routed al Shabaab rebels from Kismayu in September but fighting flared up and dozens of civilians died as rival warlords have battled in recent weeks for control of the lucrative trade flowing through the city's port.
Tensions have been simmering for months between Kenya and the central Somali government, which accuses Nairobi of backing Ahmed Madobe, a former warlord whose militia fought beside the Kenyans and who now controls Kismayu. Mogadishu opposes Madobe's leadership.
"The government of Kenya is ready to handover the two ports but it must hand over to someone and that someone must be a negotiated process," Kenya's Foreign Affairs Principal Secretary Karanja Kibicho told a news conference, referring to the city's airport and seaport.
"Otherwise if (Kenya) just left, we would be sliding back to where came from."
In a country where political support and access to resources is founded on clan loyalties, Somalia's central government has struggled to exert its influence over its many regions and agree on how to share power under a federal political system.
In a sign of how bitter the argument has become, the semi-autonomous Puntland region on Monday broke off all ties with Mogadishu . Analysts say the southern Jubaland region, which includes Kismayu, could follow if Mogadishu mishandles the situation.
A breaking-up of the state would risk a reversal of security gains against the rebels in a country long seen as a launch pad for militant Islam in the region and beyond.
The AU peacekeeping force, known as AMISOM, has forced al Shabaab to relinquish control of key urban bases but the militants still hold sway over large rural areas.
Neighbouring countries with forces inside Somalia are frustrated at Mogadishu's failure to establish regional or local administrations in areas won back from al Shabaab.
"The AMISOM troops are stuck. They cannot move forwards," said Zaddock Madiri Syong'oh, an adviser at Kenya's foreign affairs ministry. "If they move, al Shabaab comes immediately and takes over liberated areas."
Kenya sent troops into Somalia in part to create a buffer zone between al Shabaab and its porous border with the Horn of Africa country.
The Mogadishu government is in talks with Madobe, who Kenya denies backing, over who will administer Kismayu and how proceeds from the port and the city's airport be shared out.
Kibicho said the Kenyan government would have to be confident al Shabaab could not thrive in Jubaland, which abuts the border, before it hands over control.
 

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