18 PEOPLE HAD BEEN KILLED AFTER
GUNMEN SEIZE A CAFE FOR HOURS IN BURKINA FASO
United Nations: Gunmen stormed an upscale cafe
overnight in Burkina Faso's capital, Ouagadougou, strafing the building with
bullets and barricading themselves inside for hours. By the time security
forces reclaimed the restaurant around dawn Monday, at least 18 people had been
killed and eight others wounded, according to local authorities.
The West African nation's
communications minister, Remis Dandjinou, told reporters Monday that by
daybreak, two of the attackers had been killed and several foreign nationals
were among the dead. In separate statements, officials in Paris and Ankara
confirmed the victims include a French citizen and Turkish citizen, while
another Turk was injured in the violence.
While Burkinabe officials blamed
Islamist militants for the attack on the Turkish cafe, no one group immediately
claimed responsibility. "I salute the bravery of our security and defense
forces whose engagement allowed us to neutralize the terrorists,"
Burkinabe President Roch Marc Christian Kabore said in a statement. "The
struggle against terrorism is a lengthy fight," he added. "That is
why I am calling for vigilance, solidarity and unity of the whole nation to
face up to the cowardice of our enemies."
In a news conference Monday,
Dandjinou detailed the night's bloody events, which opened when he says about
three to four militants rolled up to the cafe on motorcycles around 9 p.m.
local time. They opened fire on an outside seating area outside then moved
indoors, where The New York Times notes a family had been celebrating a
9-year-old boy's birthday.
The local newspaper reports the
boy was hospitalized with injuries from the attack. For Burkinabes, the attack
on Aziz Istanbul cafe, which is popular with foreigners, prompts bitter
memories of another bloody episode just over 18 months ago. In January last
year, militants conducted an hours-long raid on a luxury hotel and a cafe just
blocks away from Aziz Istanbul, ultimately killing some 30 people before being
dislodged by security forces. Al-Qaida
in the Islamic Maghreb, a militant group based in the region, claimed responsibility
for that attack as well as another deadly assault just months before in
neighboring Mali.
Islamist groups have been active
for years in the Sahel region, which includes Mali and Burkina Faso. As groups
linked to al-Qaida have carried out attacks in the area, the Times points out
that the United Nations peacekeeping mission to Mali "has become one of
the most dangerous in the world." The French government which controlled
Burkina Faso, then called Upper Volta, as a colony until 1960 says President
Emmanuel Macron met with Kabore on Monday to discuss the circumstances of the
latest attack. The pair of leaders also reaffirmed their commitment to the
formation of an international security force in the Sahel region to
"continue the fight against terrorist groups."
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