Israel’s Sinai warning falls on deaf ears (JERUSALEM POST) By ARIEH O’SULLIVAN / THE MEDIA LINE 04/23/12)
Source: http://www.jpost.com/MiddleEast/Article.aspx?id=267248
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Israelis vacationing in the Egyptian Sinai Peninsula appear to be
paying little heed to urgent warnings by the National Security
Council’s (NSC) Counterterrorism Bureau to return home immediately.
Sinai hoteliers say that despite the warnings on an imminent attack
rooms are mostly full.
“We are fully booked. Most of the hotels are fully booked because it
is known that the Israelis are issuing warnings nearly every week, so
no one is respecting their view,” Samar Ali, the owner of Nakhil Inn
near Nuweiba, told The Media Line. “This is the Garden of Eden, a
little paradise.”
In an unusual move for the NSC’s Counterterrorism Bureau, it issued
the warning on Saturday, saying they had a “very high concrete
warning” of an attack. It called on all Israelis to immediately leave
the peninsula and to contact their families to let them know they are
safe.
“We have obtained intelligence that terrorist organizations from the
Gaza Strip are plotting a terrorist attack against Israelis
vacationing along the Sinai coast,” the warning said.
The warning comes amid growing lawlessness in the Sinai Peninsula,
which abuts Israel. Al-Qaida and Palestinian terrorists are using it
as a launch pad for strikes against Israel and disgruntled Beduin
routinely attack the pipeline that delivers natural gas to Israel and
Jordan. Egyptian forces have failed to keep order since former
president Hosni Mubarak was toppled over a year ago.
Nevertheless, Egyptian officials are accusing Israel of trying to
harm the country’s tourism industry just as it is starting to
recover. The number of tourists visiting Egypt rose by a third to 2.5
million in the first quarter of 2012, compared with the same time
2011 when the Egypt´s revolution kept visitors away.
Maj.-Gen. Khaled Foada, the governor of South Sinai, said hours after
the NSC warning was “mere rumors that Israel launches from time to
time, especially as tourism in Sharm el-Sheikh recovers.” Sharm el-
Sheikh on the peninsula’s southern tip is Sinai’s biggest resort.
Quoted by the Egyptian State Information Service, Fawzi, the head of
the Chamber of South Sinai Hotels, said that the hotel occupancy rate
in Sharm el-Sheikh has reached 68% for the first time since the
revolution.
Still, many Israelis, thick-skinned to terror attacks, have ignored
the warnings to visit the popular resorts on the Red Sea. A large
number of them are Israeli Arabs and may feel immune to being
targeted by terrorists. So far, there has been no mass exodus from
the Sinai.
“This warning is having no effect at all. It’s all very calm,” Ali
said.
Sabin Hadad, spokeswoman for the Population, Immigration, and Borders
Authority (PIBA), which monitors border crossings, told The Media
Line that since the warning more Israelis entered Egypt than left.
Eighty-eight Israelis had returned while 212 entered Egypt since the
warning was issued.
Vice Premier Moshe Ya’alon, a former IDF chief of general staff, said
that Sinai has turned into a “problematic zone used by al-Qaida and
other terrorist elements from the Gaza Strip and Sinai.”
In the last month alone, two Americans, two Brazilians and three
Koreans have been abducted by Beduin tribesmen, although all were
released unharmed. At a currency exchange store in Sharm el-Sheikh, a
French tourist was killed and two other people were wounded when
Beduin robbers and police officers got into a firefight there in late
January.
South Sinai security chief Mahmoud Hefnawi reportedly said that
Egyptian security forces were “escorting tourists from the moment
they enter the district and until they leave. Security forces are
present in all tourist attractions to ensure the visitors´ safety.”
A day before the Israeli warning, the British Foreign office updated
its threat assessment about Sinai saying that there was a “high risk
of indiscriminate attacks including public places frequented by
expatriates and foreign travelers” in the Sinai. Over a million
British citizens visited all of Egypt in 2011, but it was not clear
how many went to Sinai, a popular resort area.
Over the years, the Sinai has been the scene of terrorist attacks,
including the 2004 double car bombing of the Hilton Taba that killed
26 people and wounded 160. Nevertheless, the coastal area continues
to draw tourists who flock to the sunny beaches and amazing coral
reefs. Two weeks ago, Movenpick Resort in Sharm el-Sheikh’s Naama Bay
reopened its doors after an extensive refurbishment.
“We are exited to be back in this highly popular resort destination”
said Adel Bibars, the hotel’s general manager. “This resort is ideal
for guests seeking relaxation as well as the more active guests
looking for sports or the bustling nightlife of Sharm el-Sheikh.” (©
1995-2011, The Jerusalem Post 04/23/12)
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