Al-Qaeda claims deadly attack at Ivory Coast beach resort

Mar 14, 2016

Armed with grenades and assault riffles, the attackers stormed three hotels in the sleepy resort of Grand-Bassam, popular with expats, around 40 kilometres (25 miles) east of the commercial hub Abidjan

Gunmen killed 16 people at an Ivory Coast resort Sunday leaving bodies strewn on the beach, in an attack claimed by an Al-Qaeda affiliate as fears grow of a mounting jihadist threat in west Africa.

Armed with grenades and assault riffles, the attackers stormed three hotels in the sleepy resort of Grand-Bassam, popular with expats, around 40 kilometres (25 miles) east of the commercial hub Abidjan.

Witnesses described panic as the gunmen sprayed bullets across the beach, and one told AFP they heard an assailant shouting "Allahu Akbar" -- Arabic for "God is greatest".

"I saw one of the attackers from far away," says Abbas El-Roz, a Lebanese salesman, who was in the pool of a hotel when the attackers struck. "He had a Kalashnikov and a grenade belt. He was looking for people."

 


Fourteen civilians and two special forces troops were killed in the shooting spree, along with six assailants, according to Ivory Coast's President Alassane Ouattara.

"The toll is heavy," he said as he arrived in Grand-Bassam, describing the killings as a "terrorist" attack.

One French and one German national were among the dead, according to Interior Minister Hamed Bakayoko.

The US and former colonial master France offered offered to help the Ivorian government find the perpetrators, with French President Francois Hollande condemning the "cowardly attack".

The US-based SITE Intelligence Group said Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), the terror group's North African affiliate, had claimed responsibility for the attack.

AQIM said in a statement three of its fighters had been killed.

 oldiers stand around a young boy who was injured during an attack on the beach at the hotel toile du ud in rand assam on arch 13 2016 laedas orth frican affiliate claimed a deadly attack by heavilyarmed gunmen on an vory oast resort on arch 13 that killed at least 16 people based monitors said he strike which targeted three hotels in the former rench colonial capital that is popular with estern expatriates also killed 14 civilians and two special forces troops he said   Soldiers stand around a young boy who was injured during an attack on the beach at the hotel Etoile du Sud in Grand Bassam on March 13, 2016. Al-Qaeda's North African affiliate claimed a deadly attack by heavily-armed gunmen on an Ivory Coast resort on March 13 that killed at least 16 people, US-based monitors said. The strike, which targeted three hotels in the former French colonial capital that is popular with Western expatriates, also killed 14 civilians and two special forces troops, he said. SIA-KAMBOU / AFP

 

I thought this was it

West African nations have scrambled to boost security in the wake of jihadist attacks on tourist hotspots in the capitals of Mali and Burkina Faso, which 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.

The assailants, who were "heavily armed and wearing balaclavas, fired at guests at the L'Etoile du Sud, a large hotel which was full of expats in the current heatwave," a witness told AFP.

Inside the hotel, an AFP journalist saw a bullet lodged in the glass front of the bar's refrigerator and a large pool of blood on the floor.

Carine Boa, a Belgian-Ivorian national who teaches 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 the November's terror attacks in the French capital when 130 people were killed.

 eople put a blanket on a body lying on the beach following after gunmen went on a shooting rampage in the vory oast resort of randassam on arch 13 2016 ourteen civilians and two soldiers were killed in the attack resident lassane uattara said   People put a blanket on a body lying on the beach following after gunmen went on a shooting rampage in the Ivory Coast resort of Grand-Bassam, on March 13, 2016. Fourteen civilians and two soldiers were killed in the attack, President Alassane Ouattara said. SIA-KAMBOU / AFP

 

"I thought this was it for us. You always tell yourselves that these things can't happen."

The army was tightly controlling access to the area after the attack, and an AFP journalist saw around a dozen people, including an injured Western woman, being evacuated in a military truck.

French support

French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault and Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve will travel to Abidjan on Tuesday in a show of solidarity with the country, an official in Paris said.

In the French capital, prosecutors opened an inquiry into the assault, while France's embassy in Ivory Coast told its nationals to stay away from the area "to avoid obstructing security forces".

Fears have been growing of terrorist attacks and the recently concluded Flintlock military exercise, grouping African, US and European troops, focused on the need to counter jihadism in the region.

 vorian president lassane uattara  visits the beach resort of randassam after gunmen went on a shooting rampage in three hotels on arch 13 2016 ourteen civilians and two soldiers were killed in the attack resident lassane uattara said   Ivorian president Alassane Ouattara (C) visits the beach resort of Grand-Bassam after gunmen went on a shooting rampage in three hotels, on March 13, 2016. Fourteen civilians and two soldiers were killed in the attack, President Alassane Ouattara said. SIA-KAMBOU / AFP

 

Gunmen killed 30 people in Burkina Faso's capital Ouagadougou in January, while an attack in Mali the previous November left 20 dead. AQIM claimed both attacks, which both targeted hotels popular with foreigners.

Sunday's attack comes as a blow to Ivory Coast's tourism sector, which the government is seeking to boost as the country emerges from a decade of political crisis.

Ouattara was re-elected for a second presidential term late last year, hoping to turn the page on the violence and revive Ivory Coast's conflict-scarred economy.

Former president Laurent Gbagbo is currently on trial at the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity over deadly violence that followed the disputed 2010 election that brought Ouattara to power.

More than 3,000 people were killed in five months of unrest after the presidential polls, when Gbagbo refused to concede defeat.

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