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STRATFOR GLOBAL INTELLIGENCE UPDATE
Kenya crackdown inflaming religious tensions
U.S. pressures country's police to root out Islamic terror cells

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Under U.S. pressure, Kenyan police have launched a series of raids targeting
the country's Muslim community. Nairobi has focused on the predominantly
Muslim coastal city of Mombasa, which is believed to harbor terrorist cells
connected to al Qaeda and which is also a transit point for South Asian drug
traffickers. The crackdown will widen divisions between the Muslim and
non-Muslim communities and will also force drug smugglers to seek alternate
routes.

Kenyan police recently arrested more than 50 Muslims, including the leader of
the National Muslim Youth party. The arrests are part of a new crackdown by
Kenyan authorities -- in response to pressure from Washington -- aimed at
rooting out potential terrorist cells.

Several members of the business community were targeted in the raids, which
are exacerbating the historical hostility between Kenya's Muslims and
non-Muslims. The heightened tensions bode ill for the East African country's
long-term stability. In the near term, the expanded police vigilance will
hinder drug smuggling through Kenya, forcing traffickers to seek alternative
routes and undermining the effectiveness of law enforcement.

The Sept. 11 terror strikes against the United States have thrown a spotlight
on East Africa's Muslim communities. Washington has focused especially on
Kenya and Tanzania. Some of the suspects implicated in the 1998 U.S. Embassy
bombings came from Zanzibar and the Kenyan port city of Mombasa, suggesting
al Qaeda has established cells and contacts in these areas.

East Africa: terrorism's ties to drugs

Seven Pakistanis and a Zambian en route to Europe were arrested recently in
Uganda. The suspects are allegedly tied to Osama bin Laden and have also been
linked to drug trafficking. Suspected terrorist networks in East Africa
overlap with the drug trade from South Asia, making East Africa a vital
source for information on funding sources for al Qaeda and the Taliban.

Uganda's Joint Anti-Terrorism Taskforce arrested seven Pakistanis and a
Zambian Sept. 29 in Entebbe, Uganda. The suspects -- thought to be both drug
traffickers and members of Saudi exile Osama bin Laden's terrorism network --
were en route from Rwanda to Europe, The Post, a daily in Lusaka, Zambia,
reported Oct. 2.

Terrorists in the region also allegedly receive funding from the drug trade,
and both they and drug traffickers are reliant on the same networks and
routes for support. For instance, Mombasa, besides possibly harboring
terrorist cells, is a key transit point for South Asian drug traffickers.

Nearly 7 percent of Kenya's 30 million people are Muslim. They are
concentrated in Nairobi and Mombasa and comprise a significant portion of
Kenya's entrepreneurial and middle-class business leaders. The Muslim
community's politicians and religious leaders are also vocal factions in
Nairobi's political landscape.

Since Sept. 11, Kenyan authorities have expanded law enforcement efforts,
especially in Mombasa. Several businessmen and politicians there, including
the leader of the National Muslim Youth of Kenya party, Rishad Amana, and
well-known business leader Ali Sharrif Sagaaf, have been held for days.

The FBI had sought to have the suspects extradited to the United States for
questioning about the hijacking attacks. But Mombasa's High Court earlier
this week issued a temporary injunction preventing the extradition to the
United States of Kenyans whose arrest may be connected to the terrorism
investigation, the Daily Nation, a Nairobian daily, reported.

Kenyan authorities have denied that Muslims are being targeted, yet the
recent crackdown suggests the contrary. Several Muslim political groups,
including the powerful Council of Imams, Muslims for Human Rights and the
Islamic Party of Kenya, have condemned the arrests and the involvement of
U.S. law enforcement.

The crackdowns threaten to widen the religious divide in the country. There
have always been tensions between Kenya's religious communities. More than 60
percent of Kenyans are Christians, but the Muslim minority exerts an
inordinate amount of political influence because of its control over Mombasa.

Strained relations between Muslims and non-Muslims and between the government
and religious leaders could threaten political stability. The potential
presence of terror cells suggests at least some Muslims are already
radicalized, and heightened political tensions could further alienate members
of the community.

Moreover, with presidential elections approaching and Kenya facing only the
second transition of executive power since gaining independence, a
politically volatile issue like religious profiling by law enforcement
agencies could enflame what will already be a heated race, setting the stage
for a violent political campaign.

The closer scrutiny by the FBI and local law officers is also creating a
difficult situation for regional traffickers, who prefer to move drugs from
South Asia through countries like Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda because they all
have international airports with daily flights to Europe and the United
States.

Criminal organizations within these Islamic communities provide in-country
support for drug smugglers emanating from Muslim Pakistan and Afghanistan.
And with porous borders, long and difficult-to-patrol coastlines and corrupt
law-enforcement authorities, the chances of interdiction are low.

The new focus by local and international law enforcement will force
traffickers to avoid Kenya and Tanzania and seek alternative routes, such as
Mozambique. With a long coastline and sieve-like borders, the former
Portuguese colony is already a transit state, providing traffickers with an
established route.

But Mozambique, unlike its northern neighbors, does not enjoy the same level
of international travel through its airports, thus making traffickers more
vulnerable to interdiction. Smugglers may therefore try to reach South
Africa, another conduit for South Asian drugs. Even Zimbabwe, verging on
political chaos, could see traffic increase.

Smugglers who normally use East Africa may also turn to routes through
Somalia, other nations in the Horn of Africa and states in the Persian Gulf.
But there are fewer international flights out of the Horn and a greater risk
of getting caught in the strict societies of the Gulf states, reducing their
appeal as alternate routes.

The consequences of heightened drug smuggling through southern Africa will be
dramatic and long lasting, with increased drug use, violent crime, corruption
and clashes between rival smuggling gangs threatening the region's stability.
A greater spread of trafficking will also force law enforcement agencies --
including Western agencies focused on terrorism in East Africa -- to disperse
their resources, making them less effective.




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