
Two soldiers
have been arrested in Cote d’Iviore accused of failing to denounce suspected members
of an al Qaeda cell that killed 19 people in a March attack on a beach resort
town, military officials said on Thursday.
The raid on Grand Bassam, 40 km (25 miles) from the commercial capital,
Abidjan, by al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), the jihadist group’s North
African affiliate, was the furthest yet from its traditional desert base.
Authorities in Cote d’Iviore and neighbouring Mali have arrested a number of
suspects since the attack. The country’s military prosecutor Colonel Ange Kessi
said the soldiers were not accused of participating directly in the Grand
Bassam plot
.
“The two soldiers knew certain
members of the unit that attacked the beach in Grand Bassam and did not signal
that to their hierarchy, which is a serious offence under the military code of
justice,” he said. They are due to stand trial at the end of August, Kessi
added. The attack in Grand Bassam, during which gunmen shot swimmers and
sunbathers before storming into several hotels, also harmed French-speaking
West Africa’s largest economy, a rising star on the continent. AQIM has killed
dozens of people in a series of attacks against high-profile civilian targets
in Mali, Burkina Faso and Cote d’Iviore since late last year. It says they are
intended as revenge for a 2013 French-led intervention against Islamist groups
in Mali.


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