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African News

London Suspects Have Ties to East Africa

Monday, August 08, 2005 1:59:41 AM
By CHRIS TOMLINSON

 Twenty four hours after a bomb exploded outside the American Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya, rescue workers pull out a man still alive from the neighboring building in this Aug. 8, 1998 file photo. Under U.S. pressure, the Sudanese government expelled bin Laden in 1996, forcing him to move to Afghanistan. But al Qaida left cells behind in East Africa, and two of them attacked the U.S. Embassies in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania in 1998, leaving 12 Americans and more than 500 Africans dead. At least three of the four suspects in the July 21 attempted bombings of the London subway were born in East Africa, where al Qaida-linked groups still operate and may be growing in strength, according to a new assessment by counterterrorism experts. (AP Photo/Ken Karuga/File)NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) - At least three of the four suspects in the July 21 attempted bombings on the London subway and a bus were born in East Africa, where al-Qaida-linked groups still operate and may be growing in strength, according to a new assessment by counterterrorism experts.

The attackers, at least two of them naturalized British citizens, were born in Somalia, Ethiopia and Eritrea and there is no evidence they have been back there recently. But East Africa has several indigenous terror groups and has suffered three al-Qaida attacks since 1998.

"There is a genuine threat, there is no doubt the networks are still present and they retain the capacity to strike again," said Matt Bryden, an East Africa analyst for the think-tank International Crisis Group. "On the other hand, much more is known about these groups, there has been an intelligence surge in the last few years, they are kept under pressure."


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