Mali arrests two over Ivory Coast resort attack

Police officers of the Research and Assistance Police stand on the beach in Grand-Bassam on March 15, 2016, a day after a jihadist attack killed 18 people in the resort town. PHOTO: AFP

BAMAKO (AFP) - Two Malians who "actively participated" in a deadly Islamist assault on an Ivory Coast beach resort have been arrested, including the right-hand man of the suspected mastermind, security sources said on Sunday (March 27).

The two were picked up in northern Mali at the weekend, two weeks after the March 13 gun and grenade assault on three hotels and a beach in Grand-Bassam that killed 19 people.

The arrests were welcomed by Ivory Coast which hailed "international cooperation in the fight against terror".

The Grand-Bassam rampage, the first of its kind in the Ivory Coast, was claimed by Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb which has also carried out similar assaults on tourist hotspots in Mali and Burkina Faso.

So far, 15 people have been arrested over the Grand-Bassam attacks, with Ivorian investigators backed by anti-terror specialists and judicial expert from Paris. The United States and Germany are also helping with the probe.

The latest suspects were identified as Ibrahim Ould Mohamed, who was arrested on Friday night, and Midy Ag Sodack Dicko, who was picked up a day later.

"Evidence suggests that they actively participated in the Grand-Bassam attack," a Malian security source told AFP, with the information confirmed by several other sources.

Ould Mohamed, who was arrested late on Friday in Goundam, 80 kilometres southwest of the historic city of Timbuktu, is considered a close confidante of Kounta Dallah, the suspected attacks mastermind.

"He is the driver and the right-hand man of Kounta Dallah, the brains behind the attack. He has provided some interesting information," a Timbuktu police official told AFP, without giving further details.

Dallah, who is still at large, is suspected of both organising and taking part in the attack, according to the Abidjan prosecutor, who did not give his nationality.

"Ibrahim Ould Mohamed did not hide the fact that he is close to Kounta. He knows many things," said a source close to the Timbuktu governorate. He will be transferred Bamako later on Sunday.

The second suspect, Ag Sodack Dicko, was arrested on Saturday in Gossi, 160 kilometres west of Gao, the biggest town in northern Mali, a local police source said.

He had "acknowledged that several of those involved in the operation in Grand-Bassam stayed at his place in Abidjan," the source said, referring to Ivory Coast's main city.

"He said he didn't know they were going to carry out this crimes," the source said, dismissing the claim as a bluff.

He provided logistical supposed "and consequently took part in the attack operation" a local police source said. He left Ivory Coast shortly after the attack, taking a flight to Bamako.

At least three assailants armed with grenades and assault rifles took part in the attack in which they stormed three hotels in Grand-Bassam, a resort popular with expats that lies 40 kilometres from Abidjan.

The former French colonial capital is also a Unesco World Heritage site.

It was the third such strike in West Africa in recent months, following a November assault on a top hotel in Mali's capital which killed 20 people, most of them foreigners, and another in a Burkina Faso hotel in January which killed 30 people.

All three targeted venues frequented by foreigners.

The Grand-Bassam attack bore grim similarities to an Islamist gun and grenade assault on a Tunisian beach resort last June, which left 37 foreign holidaymakers dead.

Faced with a growing jihadist threat, West African nations have scrambled to boost security but are seeing visitor numbers fall as foreign governments warn their nationals about the risks.

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