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Arabia
Belgian Tourists Murdered in Yemen Ambush
2008-01-19
Gunmen opened fire on a tourist convoy Friday afternoon in the eastern Hadramawt region, killing two Belgian women and two Yemeni drivers, Yemeni officials said. The attack was the first aimed at foreigners in Yemen since last summer, when a suicide car bomber attacked a group of tourists visiting a temple in central Yemen, killing eight Spaniards and two Yemenis. The Yemeni state news agency identified the Belgian women as Klaudi Klawy and Catharine Glory. One of the drivers was identified as Ahmed al Amiri. Their bodies were being flown back to the capital Friday night.

The attack took place in the Wadi Dawan district, about 180 miles east of Sanaa. Four gunmen waiting in a pickup truck near a speed bump along a rural road ambushed a four-car tourist convoy, said a tourist official who asked not to be identified. Two Belgians and one Yemeni were also wounded. The attackers then bravely fled, said YemenÂ’s tourist minister, Nabeel al Faqih.

The area where the attacks occurred, near a famous group of ancient multistory mud dwellings in the town of Shibam, is not considered especially dangerous. There have been kidnappings in the area, but they have subsided in recent years after a government crackdown.
Posted by:Fred

#11  From the above link, this is priceless:

"TO the untrained thrill-seeker, Yemen would seem to promise the kind of adventures that only James Bond would relish: kidnapping by tribal factions, riots over gasoline prices, cheap and plentiful AK-47s, and taxi drivers who pack daggers and pistols. Plus, thereÂ’s the specter of terrorism: the bombing of the U.S.S. Cole in Aden in 2000 presaged much bigger attacksSkip to next paragraph

But in contrast to the rest of the Arabian Peninsula, which is mostly hot, dry and barren, Yemen is practically a cool green paradise, with crisp mountain air, enormous acacia trees, pristine coral reefs and verdant fields bursting with khat, a psychoactive plant that induces mild euphoria.

In recent years, tour operators have started to capitalize on Yemen’s exotic geography as the new frontier in adventure travel. New outfits offer grueling treks to mountaintop villages, four-wheel-drive safaris through untrammeled deserts and sailing voyages aboard ancient dhows to isolated, Galápagos-like islands. And unlike Dubai, the Oz-like emirate on the other side of Saudi Arabia, Yemen is nothing if not authentic.

Yemen is also safer today, thanks to post-9/11 ties between Yemen and the United States that seem to have quieted tribal tensions and undermined terrorist operations in the country. A steady stream of European adventurers have already arrived.

One of the more intrepid tours is offered by Arabia Felix, a tour company based in Dubai. It has started two-week-long safaris that snake from Dubai across Oman, and along old frankincense trading routes into eastern Yemen. Guests alternate between camping alongside desert nomads and staying at luxurious places like the Al Hawta Palace Hotel, a former Yemeni palace in Sayun.

Visitors get to see “an Arabia with no borders,” said Marco Livadiotti, one of the principals of Arabia Felix.

After crossing into Yemen, the journey continues through the fabled Empty Quarter of the Arabian Desert, the world’s largest stretch of sand. Then it proceeds to the fertile green valley of Wadi Hadramaut, home to Yemen’s two most atmospheric towns. The walled city of Shibam has a skyline of tall mud-brick houses, earning it the nickname “the Manhattan of the Desert.” Nearby, the ancient town of Tarim has 365 mosques, one for each day of the year.

The final leg of the journey, from archaeologically rich Marib to the capital, Sana, is a bit dodgier and requires an armed Bedouin escort because of tribal unrest.

For those who want to explore by foot, the Haraz Mountains along YemenÂ’s western edge are a hikerÂ’s paradise. The region is linked by well-worn trails that cut through fields of prized khat, zigzag across lush green mountaintops and pass through fortresslike villages of mud and stone houses.

Along the way, you can pitch a tent, check into small village guesthouses, or luck out with an invitation to stay at someoneÂ’s home. Yemen may seem chaotic, but old-school Arabian hospitality, especially toward foreigners, almost always prevails.

YemenÂ’s most far-flung adventure is undoubtedly the island of Socotra, a time capsule 210 miles off the coast in the Indian Ocean. Socotra is an alien world, even to most Yemenis. Natives speak an obscure language, Soqotri, that is virtually unintelligible to mainlanders. The fauna and flora of this island evolved separately from mainland Arabia.

Until recently, the island could be reached only by boat and was cut off from the rest of the world during the monsoon season, June to September. Now flights land year round, bringing scuba divers to spectacular reefs that are only beginning to be explored. There are steep limestone cliffs that plunge into dark chasms, a colorful bounty of coral and other rich (and endangered) marine species like sea turtles and groupers.

Inland, you can hike up the Haghier Mountains, camp on a beach or go off-roading along the wadis (dry riverbeds), where you might come across endemic birds and plants like the dragonÂ’s blood tree, which leaks red liquid when cut.

But the most exotic encounter on Socotra may be its people, descendants of both African and South Arabian tribes, who have developed a culture unique from any other place on the planet. Even today, the islanders seem to live as they want, not to please or profit from the few tourists who reach their home."

Posted by: bruce   2008-01-19 19:29  

#10  Best Tourist destination of 2007, If you can't trust the NYT who can you trust? See: http://www.yementourism.com/
Posted by: bruce   2008-01-19 19:24  

#9  Don't worry Ptah, Lake City not getting a moskk.
Posted by: Thomas Woof   2008-01-19 18:05  

#8  but I'll wait until they no longer shoot strangers just for the fun of it

Gangs sometimes have prospective members kill someone at random to prove their "worth" and acclimatize them to violence and so they have something to blackmail them with. I sort of wonder if it isn't the same kind of thing. Terrorists also like to prove they are bada$$es so that nobody will screw with them. Look at that kid Yousif that they grabbed at random and set on fire. This to me just seems like a confluence of several terrorist ideas. They get to join the club, get used to killing in preparation for the big day, prove their commitment, command some respect, kill some infidels instead of some locals, get some notoriety, and have some cheap fun all at the same time.
Posted by: gorb   2008-01-19 16:17  

#7  OP, there are certain places I'd love to go back to, but by the time the boys are out of college and I can afford to Go, the Muzzies will have taken over...
Posted by: Ptah   2008-01-19 16:10  

#6  There are companies in Western Europe and Britain that advertise "adventure tours" - tours to places most others never go to. There's a sort of one-upmanship in visiting those places, in part because of the danger and deprivation one has to accommodate in order to visit these places. I've seen my share of that part of the world, so I'm not interested. There ARE certain places I'd love to see, but I'll wait until they no longer shoot strangers just for the fun of it.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2008-01-19 14:52  

#5  There are tours to Yemen? What next, Zimbabwe?
Posted by: doc   2008-01-19 13:00  

#4  When something bad happens, I believe in asking why at least seven times to track teh porcess back to its root cause. In this case the root cause is excess vacation time. No person should have some much vacation in their lifetime that Yemen should even appear on the list of options. Yemen is a dump that UBL left to move to the Sudan and Afghanistan.

On the other hand, if these people visited Yemen but have not yet visited the Meadowlands of New Jersey; Davenport, Iowa; and anywhere in Zimbabwe then it's totally on them because they went out of order.
Posted by: Super Hose   2008-01-19 12:37  

#3  That only covers muslim guests these days. Infidels ain't real people, ya see.
Posted by: Steve   2008-01-19 10:22  

#2  I thought there was something in Islam about honoring and protecting guests. Wasn't that what Mullah Omar said was the reason he couldn't hand over bin Laden, or even kick him out of A'stan back in '01?
Posted by: Glenmore   2008-01-19 09:24  

#1  you deserved this if you went too Yemen as a tourist in the first place, idiots
Posted by: sinse   2008-01-19 09:01  

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