President Uhuru Kenyatta has criticised the UK for issuing
travel advisories to its citizens, saying they were based on “untrue”
information about Kenya’s security.
In what could
signal a growing rift between Kenya and her former colonial oppressor,
the President accused the British of making selective travel warnings.
“I
have not heard the British issue travel advisories against Paris (where
terrorists attacked the headquarters of a satirical magazine in
January). I have not heard the British issue travel advisories against
other European capitals,” he said at the Windsor Hotel in Nairobi on
Wednesday.
He was addressing a group of Kenyans living in the diaspora.
The
meeting, under the theme “Development and Innovation; Opportunities for
Diaspora” was meant to educate Kenyans abroad on the opportunities
available at home.
“We want to send a clear message that they will not intimidate us with these threats,” said President Kenyatta.
He
was incensed by the fresh UK government warning to its nationals not to
visit the Coast unless they were on “essential travel”.
Two
weeks ago, UK Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond accused Kenya of sitting
on intelligence information, making it difficult to review the
warnings.
President Kenyatta refuted the claims yesterday.
“That
is not true and the challenge is on them now. There is nothing they can
claim not to be aware of,” he said. “If these traditional markets (for
our tourism) don’t want to come, tell them we are also tired of kneeling
before them all the time.
“We want to encourage,
especially our brothers and sisters from the African continent, to
travel in Africa. Help us promote this country. Help us tell them Kenya
is safe,” he said.
The new warning was issued last
Friday, a week after Mr Hammond’s trip to Kenya where he failed to
convince Nairobi to renew a bilateral military training agreement.
“The
UK has updated its travel advice for Kenya, adding advice against all
but essential travel to the coast from Tiwi (just south of Mombasa) all
the way up to the border with Somalia,” said the advisory.
“Our
travel advice for other parts of the country has not changed, and the
vast majority of the country remains outside our advisory against all
but essential travel,” it says.
The UK Foreign and
Commonwealth Office said the updated advisory was not motivated by
political or economic reasons, but was a routine review based on “our
objective assessment of the security position, an assessment shared with
the Kenyan authorities.”
Britain has more tourists coming to Kenya than any other Western country.
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