Gunmen from al Qaeda's North African branch drank beer at a beachside bar before launching a shooting rampage at an Ivory Coast resort town that left at least 18 people dead, the group's third major attack in West Africa in four months.
Sunday's
raid, details of which are beginning to emerge in witness and official
accounts, was the furthest yet from al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb's (AQIM) traditional desert base, a worrying indication of the militants' growing reach.
The
attack raised questions about Ivory Coast's preparedness for such an
attack, with some asking why such a sensitive target was left so
vulnerable.
Fifteen civilians and three members of
the special forces were killed and 33 people were wounded in the attack
in Grand Bassam, a weekend retreat popular with Ivorians and westerners
about 40 km (25 miles) east of the commercial capital Abidjan.
Interior Minister Hamed Bakayoko said another 26 wounded were still receiving medical attention on Monday, as President Alassane Ouattara declared three days of mourning for the country, which has never before been hit by al Qaeda.
Three militants also died in the attack on the resort town, a UNESCO heritage site of crumbling colonial-era buildings.
Witness
Christian Eddy said four men arrived in a Ford saloon car at the
beachside bar where he works around noon on Sunday. While two remained
outside, the two others entered and drank beers for around a half hour.
They then launched the attack.
"They
didn't speak French. They spoke Arabic. We communicated with them in
English .... The guys who were still outside started shooting and the
two seated at the table yelled 'Allahu Akbar' and flipped over the table," he told Reuters.
He
said the first victim was a boy who was made to kneel before he was
shot. Bar staff tried to warn a deaf boy who was playing nearby.
"People
were yelling 'Come over here!' But he didn't know what was happening
and just went down to the water. They shot him in the water," Eddy said.
The gunmen then moved up the beach, continuing their killing spree and entering several seaside hotels.
Surveillance footage from Hotel Etoile du Sud - one of the attackers' first targets where two people including a German woman and a Lebanese man were gunned down - showed the initial panic in the hotel bar as the first shots rang out.
Staff crouched and then fled along with customers, among them parents carrying babies or leading young children by the hand.
A
man, apparently disguised as a waiter in a red waistcoat over a white
dress shirt, entered with a rifle, fired at the empty bar and
disappeared behind it, where the Lebanese man had been hiding. More
gunshots were then heard.
The first police
officers arrived on the scene around 15 minutes after the shooting
began, witnesses said. It would be another half hour before special
units from the security forces arrived from Abidjan.
The victims included foreign citizens from Burkina Faso, Cameroon, France, Germany and Mali.
Among the dead was Henrike Grohs, 51, head of the Abidjan branch of Germany's Goethe Institut cultural body.
France's President Francois Hollande said four French nationals were killed in the attack. The French government had earlier said just one of its citizens had died.
EASY TARGET
The
attack is a heavy blow for Ivory Coast, which has recovered from more
than a decade of political turmoil and a 2011 civil war to become one of
the world's fastest growing economies.
President
Ouattara won a landslide election victory in October, promising to
attract foreign investment to the largest economy in French-speaking
West Africa which is also the world's top cocoa producer.
"Ivory Coast will not let itself be intimidated by terrorists," Ouattara said in a televised address late on Monday. "Yes, Ivory Coast is on its feet. Yes, on its feet to combat the cowards and protect its people."
AQIM has spread across the Sahara from Algeria and now operates in much of western and northern Africa.
In January, gunmen killed dozens of people in a cafe frequented by foreigners in neighbouring Burkina Faso's capital, Ouagadougou, and also attacked a hotel. Militants attacked another hotel in the Malian capital Bamako late last year, killing 20.
Since
those attacks, Ivorian authorities have increased security around
hotels and shopping malls in Abidjan, a city of around five million
inhabitants. But there were few signs that was the case in Grand Bassam
ahead of Sunday's attack.
"Attacking Bassam
was the easiest thing for them to do. Bassam is where all the
expatriates and middle class from Abidjan gather on the weekends," said one longtime resident, who said he had seen no sign of recent security improvements.
"We don't understand why this wasn't considered a priority for protection. It would be easy," he said, asking not to be named.
The
recent attacks in the region are generally viewed as targeting France
and its allies after Paris intervened militarily in Mali in 2013 to
drive out al Qaeda-linked militants who had seized the desert north a
year earlier.
The attack in Grand Bassam,
thousands of kilometres from al Qaeda's traditional operational zones,
raises fears over where they might strike next. It poses serious
security questions for former regional colonial power France, which has
thousands of citizens and troops in the region.
While some 18,000 French citizens live in Ivory Coast, over 20,000 reside in Senegal.
France
has 3,500 troops in the region, from Senegal in the far west to Chad. A
French military base in Abidjan, manned by around 800 soldiers, serves
as a logistical hub for regional operations against Islamist militancy
in the Sahel.
French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc
Ayrault and Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve will travel to Ivory
Coast on Tuesday to offer logistical support and intelligence, French
diplomatic sources said. Counter-terrorism officials have also been sent
to help the investigation.
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