MALI UNDER TERRORIST ATTACK AT Radisson Blu Hotel
MALI UNDER TERRORIST ATTACK AT Radisson Blu Hotel , Mali attack: Special forces storm hotel to free hostages
•
[7 a.m. ET] At least 80 of roughly 170 hostages have been freed from
the Radisson Blu Hotel in Mali's capital, Bamako, the country's state
broadcaster, ORTM, said Friday.
• [6:45
a.m. ET] Two to three attackers with AK-47s arrived at the hotel in a
vehicle or vehicles with diplomatic plates around 7 a.m., said Olivier
Saldago, a spokesman for the United Nations mission in Mali.
•
[6:45 a.m. ET] Once there, the gunmen entered the hotel and began
shooting at people, Saldago said. Two Malian nationals and a French
national have died, a U.N. official said without elaborating.
•
[6:45 a.m. ET] Mali President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita has cut short his
trip to Chad for a summit to return to Bamako, according to a message
Friday on his official Twitter account. He expected to arrive in Mali
sometime Friday afternoon, presidential spokesman Diarra Diakite told
CNN.
FULL STORY:
Two
or three attackers stormed a hotel in Mali's capital Thursday morning,
firing guns and initially taking about 170 people hostage, officials
said. At least three deaths were reported.
Two
armed men initially locked in about 140 guests and 30 employees at the
Radisson Blu Hotel in Bamako, hotel officials said. By noon, the
country's state broadcaster, ORTM, reported that at least 80 of the
hostages had been freed.
The attackers,
carrying AK-47s, arrived around 7 a.m. in a vehicle or vehicles with
diplomatic plates, said Olivier Saldago, a spokesman for the United
Nations mission in Mali.
The gunmen
fired as they entered the hotel, and the gunshots went on for several
minutes, said witness Amadou Keita, who works at a cultural center close
by.
Two Malian nationals and a French national have died, a U.N. official said without elaborating.
Malian
soldiers, with help from U.N. troops, had the hotel surrounded. They
were able to free a few hostages, a journalist for ORTM, the state
television, told CNN from the scene.
Among them were three U.N. staff members, a source told CNN. It's unknown how many other staffers remain inside.
No group immediately claimed responsibility for the incident.
Troubling timing
The
timing of the attack is troubling because it comes just a day after
French President Francois Hollande praised his troops for successfully
fighting Islamists in the African nation.
"France
is leading this war with its armed forced, its soldiers, its courage.
It must carry out this war with its allies, its partners giving us all
the means available, as we did in Mali, as we are going to continue in
Iraq, as we'll continue in Syria," he said.
Mali is a former French colony.
At
Mali's request, France launched an offensive in 2013 after radical
Islamists seized the strategic town of Konna in the former French
colony.
The ground and air campaign sent Islamist fighters who had seized the northern region fleeing into the vast desert.
There are no French troops stations in Bamako right now, the French army said.
Host to a delegation
Saldago,
the spokesman for the U.N. mission in Mali, known as MINUSMA, said the
hotel was host to a large delegation for the peace process.
At least seven Chinese guests are among those held hostage, Chinese media reported.
One
of them exchanged instant messages with a reporter from the Xinhua news
agency and said he heard multiple gunshots outside his room and then
smelled smoke.
China has been
expanding its presence in Africa in recent years, investing and building
large-scale infrastructure projects throughout the continent.
Many Chinese businesspeople also see opportunities in Africa and have been flocking there.
August attack
Mali: The long, troubled desert road ahead
In August, 12 people -- including five Malian soldiers -- were killed in a hostage situation and ensuing battle at a hotel in Sevare in central Mali.
The
soldiers stormed the hotel to end a daylong siege that started when
gunmen raided the hotel after attacking a military site nearby,
witnesses said.
In that incident, the attackers were affiliated with the Macina Liberation Movement.
Human
Rights Watch has described the group as Islamists who commit "serious
abuses in the course of military operations against Mali's security
forces."
The Radisson Blu Hotel is about 15 minutes from Bamako Senou International Airport. It has 190 rooms and suites.
CNN's Margot Haddad in Paris and Elizabeth Joseph in Hong Kong contributed to this report.



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