The morning of November 28th, 2002, began like any other in Kenya’s bustling
port city of Mombasa—home to more than 800,000 people and a popular des-
tination for tourists. For the guests and employees of the beachfront Paradise
Hotel in nearby Kikambala, the morning’s tranquility came to an abrupt end
when a sport utility vehicle laden with explosives crashed through the hotel’s
security gate and careened into the lobby. Seconds later, the car bomb exploded,
reducing parts of the hotel to rubble. The owner of a neighboring hotel described
the scene immediately after the explosion. “I can see bodies of local residents,” he
reported. “The whole hotel is burned totally, both wings, the lobby and every-
thing, it’s all burned” (Sawer, Arkell, and Harris, 2002).
http://blogs-cdn.fas.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/The_MANPADS_Threat.pdf
http://blogs-cdn.fas.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/The_MANPADS_Threat.pdf
No comments:
Post a Comment