OUAGADOUGOU, Burkina Faso (AP) — Burkina Faso began three
days of national mourning Sunday and the president said security would
be stepped up in the capital and the country's borders after al-Qaida
militants in a vehicle from neighboring Niger killed at least 28 people
in an attack on a hotel and cafe popular with foreigners.
In a message to the nation, President Roch Marc
Christian Kabore said the people of Burkina Faso must unite in the fight
against terrorism. He also announced on the national broadcaster,
Burkina 24, that security forces would be stepping up their efforts to
thwart future attacks and asked people to comply with the new
restrictions.
"These truly barbaric criminal acts carried out
against innocent people, claimed by the criminal organization al-Qaida
in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) seek to destabilize our country and its
republican institutions, and to undermine efforts to build a democratic,
quiet and prosperous nation," said Kabore.
The
national mourning began Sunday, a day after Burkinabe and French forces
ended a more than 12-hour siege at the upscale Splendid Hotel in
downtown Ouagadougou. When the gunfire and explosions finally stopped,
authorities said 18 were killed in the hotel and 10 were killed at the
nearby Cappuccino Cafe.
Among the victims was a Ukrainian woman
who was co-owner of the cafe with her Italian husband, Gaetano
Santomenna, according to Ukrainian officials. Although Santomenna was
not at the cafe and survived the attack, the couple's son, Michel
Santomenna, 9, was killed, according to the Italian foreign ministry.
Italy's foreign minister, Paolo Gentiloni, called the child's death "a
horrendous crime," in a tweet which also expressed sympathy with the
boy's father.
The toll also includes six Canadians, according to
Canadian officials. Others killed include seven citizens of Burkina
Faso, two Ukrainians, two Swiss, two French and one each from the U.S.,
Holland, Portugal and Libya, and one French-Ukrainian, according to
Burkina Faso officials who released a partial list. Other bodies were
being identified.
The American — Michael Riddering, 45, of Cooper City, Florida —
had been working as a missionary in Burkina Faso since 2011, where he
and his wife ran an orphanage that also provided shelter to abused women
and widows. He is survived by his four children, two of whom were
adopted from Burkina Faso.
Riddering was "a wonderful, godly man"
who managed to find spare time to help teams of volunteers from other
organizations who dug wells for local residents, said John Anderson, a
board member of Sheltering Wings, Riddering's charity.
"During the
Ebola crisis, when it was hard to find people to do the digging, Mike
would go out and join them so they could continue doing the work,"
Anderson said. "And that's backbreaking work. He never stopped moving
and never stopped helping."
Swiss authorities said its two nationals who were killed were also in Burkina Faso for humanitarian reasons.
The
al-Qaida group claiming responsibility for the carnage released an
audio tape titled: "A Message Signed with Blood and Body Parts."
On Sunday, French
authorities were back at the scene carrying out a forensic
investigation. Special forces from the former colonizer came during the
overnight siege from their base in neighboring Mali to help Burkina
Faso's military put an end to the killings.
Some guests returned
to the Splendid Hotel to pick up their luggage and other belongings left
behind when guests fled for their lives when the gunmen began firing to
kill as many people as possible.
The attack, which began around
7:30 p.m. Friday, was the first of its kind in Burkina Faso, a largely
Muslim country that had managed to avoid the kinds of jihadist attacks
that have destabilized neighboring Mali since 2012.
In
a separate incident two Australian humanitarian workers were kidnapped
by extremists in northern Burkina Faso. Surgeon Ken Elliott and his wife
Jocelyn were abducted Friday. The couple, reported to be in their 80s,
were kidnapped in the northern town of Djibo where they had run a
medical center for 40 years.
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