Cote d’Ivoire authorities ordered three days of mourning and
tightened security at public places and at its borders Monday as the
death toll from the first jihadist attack on its soil climbed to 18.
“Their aim was to frighten us, we will not let ourselves be scared,”
said Interior Minister Hamed Bakayoko after emergency government talks.
Armed with grenades and assault rifles, gunmen Sunday stormed three
hotels and sprayed the beach with bullets in the resort of Grand-Bassam,
a sleepy town popular with expats just a short 40-kilometre drive from
the commercial capital Abidjan.
The attack claimed by Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb left 15
civilians dead, including a German woman, as well as killing three
special forces troops, the government said. A total of 33 people were
injured, 26 of whom are still in hospital.
France said four of its nationals were among the dead.
AQIM’s real target was France, analysts said, punished both as Cote
d’Ivoire’s former colonial master and for hunting down jihadists in Mali
and elsewhere.
Bakayoko said “three terrorists were killed” in the assault.
Asked whether more gunmen were involved – some witnesses had reported
several attackers – the minister said “we’re still looking. We don’t
suspect more but we’re making sure we carry out the widest possible
sweep.”
Along with a three-day national mourning period starting Monday, he
said the West African nation would boost security at “strategic sites
and in public places… (such as) schools, embassies, international
institutions… and the borders.”
In the latest such jihadist assault in West Africa, witnesses
described the panic as gunfire rang out across the sand and an assailant
shouted “Allahu Akbar” – Arabic for “God is greatest”.
Condemnation came from around the world with United Nations Secretary
General Ban Ki-moon pledging to help government “efforts to bring the
perpetrators of these crimes to justice.”
French President Francois Hollande’s office said the attack would not
deter France in its efforts to combat extremist violence at home or in
its former colonies in Africa.
“France will support Ivory Coast in its initiatives to fight
terrorism and considers that cooperation between all the states
threatened by terrorist groups, particularly in West Africa, must
intensify more than ever,” a statement said.
It was the third such attack in four months in West Africa and a blow
to a nation working to lure back foreign tourists to its palm-fringed
beaches and rainforests as it recovers from a brutal civil war.
The German victim was named as 51-year-old Henrike Grohs, who headed
Abidjan’s Goethe Institute, the German language centre’s
secretary-general said.
Grand-Bassam is packed at weekends with visitors drawn by its magnificent beaches and UNESCO-listed colonial-era buildings.
Inside a hotel crowded with expats, an AFP journalist saw a bullet lodged in the front of the bar refrigerator and a large pool of blood on the floor.
Carine Boa, a Belgian-Ivorian teacher at an international high school
in Abidjan, was at one of the beach bars with her two sons when the
gunmen arrived.
“We were really scared. We thought of the people at the Bataclan,”
she said, referring to the concert venue attacked by gunmen during
November’s terror attacks in Paris that left 130 people dead.
“I thought this was it for us,” she said.
Some witnesses reported seeing more than three assailants, contradicting the official version.
“When they arrived, it was a woman who brought their luggage to put it in the bungalow,” said one witness.
“They changed (their clothes), there were seven. The first person who
came out was wearing a white top, and then he had a scarf on his head.
He faced a child and then said ‘Allahu Akbar’ and fired at the child.
When we saw that we ran.”
The US-based SITE Intelligence Group said AQIM, the terror group’s North African affiliate, had claimed responsibility.
West African nations have scrambled to boost security after jihadist
attacks in November and January on upscale hotels in the capitals of
Mali and Burkina Faso that were also claimed by the group.
Sunday’s attack also bore grim similarities to the Islamist gun and
grenade assault on a Tunisian beach resort last June, which left 38
foreign holidaymakers dead.
“Hitting Ivory Coast is clearly a way of attacking France’s
historical ally in the region,” said Antoine Glaser, author of a
recently published critical account of French colonisation in Africa
called “Arrogant comme un Francais en Afrique” (Arrogant like a
Frenchman in Africa).
Robert Besseling of Exx Africa, a specialist intelligence company, said the attack should not have come as a surprise.
“Cote d’Ivoire has been receiving warnings for at least a year from
France’s intelligence service that Islamist militants are planning to
attack major cities,” said Besseling.
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