KAMPALA (Reuters) - The bodies of four British and two New Zealand nationals who were among the eight tourists murdered by Hutu rebels inside Uganda this week will be flown out on Friday night, officials said. An official at the Kampala mortuary where the bodies are being held said the coffins of the six had already been sealed and were ready for the journey home. A Ugandan government official said they would be put on a British Airways flight to London on Friday night. The officials said U.S. diplomats had already collected the bodies of the two Americans killed in the slaughter. It was not clear when they would be flown home and U.S. officials said they planned to keep the travel plans secret. More than 100 Hutu rebels attacked three tourist camp sites at dawn on Monday. They seized 31 tourists and then singled out 14 - mainly Americans, Britons and other English speakers - to take as captives on a trek into the jungle. Hours later, they butchered four men and four women and released the other six with a message warning the West to cut off all
ties with Rwanda`s government. The tourists had come for an adventure holiday tracking rare mountain gorillas in the Bwindi National Park of southwestern Uganda, also known as the Impenetrable Forest.