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TRUMP: Uganda must find kidnappers of American tourist

FILE PHOTO: Trump speaks to African leaders 

Museveni vows ‘Uganda is safe’ after tourist kidnap

Kampala, Uganda | THE INDEPENDENT | US President Donald Trump has demanded that Uganda must find the the kidnappers of American Tourist Kimberly Endicott.

Although he welcomed Sunday’s release of the American held last week in Queen Elizabeth National Park, Trump said tourists will not feel safe until Uganda catches the kidnappers and brings them to justice.

“Uganda must find the kidnappers of the American Tourist and guide before people will feel safe in going there. Bring them to justice openly and quickly!” Trump tweeted.

But Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni  insisted his country was safe for travellers following the kidnapping of the US tourist, but vowed to further strengthen security in national parks.

The American woman and her experienced safari guide were recovered unharmed Sunday aft

“Uganda is safe,” Museveni wrote on Twitter, adding that authorities would “deal with these isolated pockets of criminals” and “continue to improve security in our parks”.

“Come and enjoy the Pearl of Africa,” he said.

er a ransom was paid for their release six days after they were abducted by gunmen while on an evening game drive in the Queen Elizabeth National Park.

Police spokesman Fred Enanga told journalists that the woman would be handed over to the American embassy in Kampala later Monday.

Security forces in Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo were still hunting her kidnappers, who escaped.

Tourism is a key industry for Uganda, home to rare mountain gorillas and other wildlife, the massive Lake Victoria and snow-capped Rwenzori Mountains.

Queen Elizabeth National Park, one of the East African nation’s most popular wildlife reserves, runs along the border with conflict-wracked regions of the Democratic Republic of Congo. It borders the famous Virunga national park, the oldest in Africa.

Government spokesman Ofwono Opondo wrote on Twitter that Endicott and Mirenge, were rescued “by Uganda security forces in the DRC”.

Enanga told journalists that the pair were released due to the “implicit threat of the use of force” because the “armed captors knew they were being pursued”.

“The operation to arrest the culprits is ongoing with the close coordination of our counterparts from the DRC,” he said.

The Ugandan police’s tourist protection force had deployed a special response unit working alongside soldiers and wildlife rangers in the hunt for the kidnapped pair.

But it appeared they had been recovered for an unknown sum of money.

Mike Walker, manager of Wild Frontiers Safaris, said US tourist Kimberly Endicott and experienced guide Jean-Paul Mirenge, were “back safe”.

“Ransom paid and people exchanged,” he told AFP by text, adding that he didn’t know the “precise amount yet”.

Police had said the kidnappers used Endicott’s mobile telephone to demand a ransom of $500,000 (445,000 euros) for the release of the pair.

Enanga made no mention of any payment and declined to provide further details due to “future operational security and tactical reasons

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