Kuwait Times

4 militants killed, 5 held after Mali resort attack

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Mali’s government said yesterday five suspected militants were in custody after an assault on a popular tourist resort near the capital, Bamako, which left two civilians dead. Four attackers were killed at the scene, Security Minister Salif Traore told AFP, while 36 hostages were freed following the incident at the Kangaba Le Campement resort on Sunday afternoon, the majority of them French and Malian. Jihadists constantly target domestic and foreign forces in Mali’s troubled north and centre, but attacks on civilians in and around the capital are much rarer, with the last major incident in November 2015 when gunmen stormed the Radisson Blu hotel.

That attack, which killed 20 people, caused the government to instate a state of emergency which has been in place more or less ever since. Residents living close to the Kangaba resort had first reported the attack after hearing shots while smoke billowed into the air, with at least one building ablaze, and special forces remained on the scene yesterday, Traore said. A witness interviewe­d on local television ORTM said he saw a man arrive on a motorcycle who “started shooting” followed by “two or three people” who came in another vehicle. Others said the assailants had shouted “Allahu Akbar” Arabic for ‘God is Greatest’. So far, no group has yet claimed responsibi­lity.

US warning

Traore told AFP one of the victims was Franco-Gabonese and that the attack had been staged by suspected militants. Earlier this month, the US embassy in Bamako had warned about “a possible increased threat of attacks against Western diplomatic missions, places of worship” and other places frequented by Westerners in Bamako. Back in January, the Kangaba’s owner, Herve Depardieu, had complained about the “alarming security informatio­n” issued by foreign consulates, telling a France-Africa summit in Bamako.

Sunday’s attack is the latest in a series of high-profile assaults in north and west Africa targeting locals and tourists, including in neighbouri­ng Burkina Faso and Ivory Coast. But in a sign of Mali’s quotidian instabilit­y, one soldier was killed and another three wounded yesterday morning in the northern town of Bamba, in what the armed forces said was yet another “terrorist attack”.

New anti-terror force

In 2012 Mali’s north fell under the control of jihadist groups linked to Al-Qaeda who hijacked an ethnic Tuareg-led rebel uprising, though the Islamists were largely ousted by a French-led military operation in Jan 2013. Since then, militants have continued to mount numerous attacks on civilians and the army, as well as on French and UN forces still stationed there. The unrest has continued despite a 2015 peace deal between the government and Tuaregled rebels that aimed to tackle some of the grievances held by separatist­s in the north.

Despite the presence of a 12,000-strong UN peacekeepi­ng mission and some of the 4,000 French troops serving in a separate counter-terrorism force operating across the Sahel region, instabilit­y is growing. France is pressing the UN Security Council to quickly adopt a resolution to fund and support a new African anti-jihadist force in the Sahel, comprising troops from Mali, Niger, Chad, Mauritania and Burkina Faso. —AFP

 ??  ?? Fire can be seen by the swimming pool of the Campement Kangaba, a tourist resort near Bamako, on Sunday. —AP
Fire can be seen by the swimming pool of the Campement Kangaba, a tourist resort near Bamako, on Sunday. —AP

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