Los Angeles Times

People with ‘desire to help’ among Mali dead

- By Robyn Dixon robyn.dixon@latimes.com Times staff writer Sergei L. Loiko in Moscow contribute­d to this report.

JOHANNESBU­RG, South Africa — It was a typical guest list at an African hotel in a troubled region: aid workers from all over, trying to make things better; Russian pilots; Chinese business people; Western politician­s; American military personnel.

When terrorists linked to one of Al Qaeda’s many West African affiliates stormed into the Radisson Blu hotel in Bamako, the Malian capital, early Friday, among those killed were U.S. aid worker Anita Datar, who was working on health projects for women, including family planning and HIV; six Russians working for Volga-Dnepr Airlines; three executives from the stateowned Chinese railway company; a Belgian regional parliament member; and an Israeli education consultant. At least eight others have not been named.

Two gunmen also died in the siege, and Malian authoritie­s were hunting at least three more terrorists. The extremist group Al Mourabitou­n, associated with veteran Algerian terrorist and Al Qaeda loyalist Mokhtar Belmokhtar, claimed responsibi­lity.

Datar, 41, friends said, was unfailingl­y kind and passionate about making a better world. She left a son, Rohan, who attends elementary school.

The former Peace Corps volunteer worked for the Palladium Group, serving as a senior director for a reproducti­ve health project in developing countries called HP+. She was also a founding board member of Tulalens, an organizati­on that crowd-sources feedback from women on health facilities in poor communitie­s to help them get access to better services.

“We are all deeply saddened,” said a friend, Tara Elms Henderson of Budd Lake, N.J. “She was kind to all around her — funny, smart, a beautiful human being. Always a friend to all. We knew she was destined for great things. She always had a desire to help.”

Henderson said she felt angry and sad, “especially when special people doing great things are lost. It’s a scary world, for sure.”

Friends and colleagues on Saturday paid tribute to Datar, who had been in Mali with two colleagues, both of whom escaped the hotel safely.

“She will be remembered as a dedicated humanitari­an and a trusted and beloved colleague,” a Palladium Group statement said.

“She was amazing,” another friend, Rashad Bajwa, posted on Facebook, saying that as his resident assistant at Rutgers, “she had a profound impact on me. She was way better than me and most people I know. A huge heart that has been prematurel­y extinguish­ed.”

In Ulyanovsk, Russia, where five of the slain airline employees lived, Gov. Sergei Morozov declared Monday a day of mourning. A spokesman for Volga-Dnepr said the company had been delivering constructi­on equipment from Oslo to Mali.

As families and friends mourned, Russian President Vladimir Putin on Saturday called for a stronger global coalition to fight terrorism, saying that it threatened all nations.

In a telegram to Mali’s president, Ibrahim Boubacar Keita, he said, “The inhuman crime committed in the capital of Mali once again proves that terrorism knows no borders and poses a real danger for the entire world. People of various nationalit­ies and religions fall victims of it. This threat can be opposed only based on a wide-scale internatio­nal cooperatio­n.”

France has vowed to cooperate with Russia to fight Islamic State, and other leaders, including President Obama and British Prime Minister David Cameron, have softened criticism over Russian airstrikes in Syria.

Russian news media recently carried video of a Russian air crew writing the words “For Paris” and “For Our People” on bombs to be dropped in Syria after Islamic State claimed responsibi­lity for placing a bomb a Russian passenger jet from the Sinai Peninsula resort of Sharm el Sheik, killing all 224 people on board. Putin on Tuesday vowed to intensify strikes against Islamic State and to hunt down those responsibl­e for bombing the civilian airliner.

Chinese President Xi Jinping on Saturday also called for greater internatio­nal cooperatio­n against terrorism and condemned the “cruel and savage” attack in Mali in a statement from the Foreign Ministry. China, with a massive business and investment presence in Africa, is vulnerable in countries like Mali where terrorist groups are active.

“China will strengthen cooperatio­n with the internatio­nal community, resolutely crack down on violent terrorist operations that devastate innocent lives and safeguard world peace and security,” the Foreign Ministry quoted Xi as saying in a statement on its website.

The deaths of the Chinese railway executives in Mali came after Islamic State said last week it had beheaded a Chinese national, Fan Jinghui, without saying where or when he and Norwegian Ole Johan Grimsgaard-Ofstad were killed. Chinese officials called it a “savage act devoid of all humanity” and vowed to strengthen internatio­nal cooperatio­n against terrorism.

President Keita said Saturday that Mali would outlast terrorists, who have increasing­ly pushed south from their northern stronghold­s to carry out attacks in Bamako and elsewhere.

“Mali will not closed down because of this attack. Paris is not, Geneva is not, New York is not, Moscow is not. Terrorism will not win,” Keita told reporters Saturday during a visit to the Radisson Blu hotel.

 ?? Habibou Kouyate AFP/Getty Images ?? A ROOM at the Radisson Blu hotel in Mali after the terrorist attack. At least 20 people died in the siege.
Habibou Kouyate AFP/Getty Images A ROOM at the Radisson Blu hotel in Mali after the terrorist attack. At least 20 people died in the siege.

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