Malian security forces mobilised Sunday to hunt the killers of two
Europeans and three locals in a nightclub attack claimed by jihadists —
the first to target Westerners in the capital.
A Frenchman, a Belgian, a Malian policeman and two others died early
Saturday when a
masked gunman burst into the nightclub in the capital
Bamako, spraying automatic gunfire and throwing grenades.
Al-Murabitoun, a jihadist group run by leading Algerian militant
Mokhtar Belmokhtar, has claimed responsibility in an audio recording
carried by Mauritanian news agency Al-Akbar.
The recording said the operation was carried out by “brave combatants
from Al-Murabitoun to avenge our prophet against the unbelieving West
which has insulted and mocked him”.
The investigation was expected to focus not only on tracking the
gunman but also an accomplice witnesses reported seeing during the
attack and a black four-wheel drive vehicle apparently used for the
getaway.
The United Nations peacekeeping force, which has around 10,000
personnel in Mali, said it has made investigators and crimes scenes
experts available to the authorities.
Police earlier announced they had arrested two Malians soon after but
later said the pair were not involved, describing them as “not
terrorists, but bandits”.
Customers of La Terrasse, in the lively Hippodrome district, said the
gunman arrived in the car and headed to the upstairs restaurant and bar
area where they began shooting.
Reports later emerged that he had already killed the Belgian and two of the Malian victims before entering the venue.
As he left he lobbed two grenades at a security patrol and one went off, killing the policeman, witnesses said.
“The killer came here because there were foreigners. He wanted to
kill foreigners, that’s for sure,” a waiter at the venue told AFP.
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