Kimberley Sue Endecott, 35, and local guide Jean Paul
Mirenge-Remezo were ambushed and seized by gunmen as they drove
in Queen Elizabeth National Park in southwest Uganda on April 2.
The kidnappers demanded a ransom of $500,000 and the pair were
released six days later.
Confirming the arrests on a government Twitter account,
spokesman Ofwono Opondo said he hoped they would help break a
larger criminal network in Uganda and neighboring Democratic
Republic of Congo. Ugandan police had announced arrests on
Tuesday, but not given the number.
The firm that organized Endecott's safari said she and her guide
were released after a "negotiated settlement" and a Ugandan
official also said a ransom was paid.
But Opondo contradicted that.
"The policy of the (government of Uganda) is that we don't pay
ransom. What you have been hearing is just rumor-mongering," he
said.
Given the importance of income from tourism, President Yoweri
Museveni's government was eager to solve the case and restore a
feeling of safety in national parks.
In 1999, an American couple, four Britons and two New Zealanders
were killed along with four guides after being ambushed by
gunmen in the Bwindi Impenetrable National Park.
(Reporting by Elias Biryabarema; Editing by George Obulutsa and
Andrew Cawthorne)
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