Houston Chronicle

Jihadi gunmen kill at least 2 at Mali resort

- By Baba Ahmed

BAMAKO, Mali — Jihadis attacked a hotel resort Sunday in Mali’s capital, taking hostages at a spot popular with foreigners on the weekends. More than 30 people managed to escape, though at least two people were killed, authoritie­s said.

Moussa Ag Infahi, director of the national police, told the Associated Press that three of the assailants had been killed while a fourth escaped.

Gunfire first rang out at the Campement Kangaba on the outskirts of Bamako in the late afternoon, according to a security guard who was working at the time.

Mahamadou Doumbia said a militant on a motorcycle entered the area around 3:40 p.m. and cried “Allah Akbar” before jumping off and running toward the pool area.

“Then a car with three jihadis entered the resort, and they started to fire their weapons,” he said. “A French soldier who had come for the weekend but had his gun shot and wounded a jihadi.”

Mali’s security minister later issued a statement confirming at least two deaths, one of which was a dual French-Gabonese citizen.

As night fell, witnesses saw smoke rising from the Campement Kangaba, which features three swimming pools and is a popular escape from the Malian heat. It was not immediatel­y clear what was burning, although jihadis in other attacks have set cars ablaze.

There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity for the attack, which took place amid the final week of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. In predominan­tly Muslim Mali, people have been fasting from sunrise to sundown for three weeks.

Sunday’s violence came about a week after the U.S. State Department warned of possible attacks on Western diplomatic missions and other locations in Bamako that Westerners frequent.

A U.N. official who spoke on condition of anonymity as he was not authorized to speak to journalist­s said those at the resort when the attack began included people affiliated with the French military mission, as well as the U.N. and European Union missions in the country.

Religious extremism in Mali once was limited to northern areas, prompting the French military in 2013 to lead a military operation to oust jihadis from power in the major towns in the north. But the militants have continued targeting Malian forces and peacekeepe­rs, making it the deadliest U.N. mission in the world.

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