Kayaknya memang kerjaan orang Islam lagi...

Saya kutip:

"Both attacks were claimed by a spinoff of al-Qaida’s local chapter, the 
Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa, or MUJAO, said French radio RFI."

http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/africa/2013/05/23/26-killed-in-2-simultaneous-car-bombs-in-Niger.html

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Last Update: Thursday, 23 May 2013 KSA 18:32 - GMT 15:32

26 killed in 2 simultaneous car bombs in Niger

Thursday, 23 May 2013


Soldiers look at burnt motorcycles off the street in the northern Nigerian cty 
of Kaduna after a car explosion killed at least 20 people on April 8, 2012, 
most of them commercial motorcyclists near a church. (File photo: AFP)

The Associated Press, Niger -

Suicide bombers in Niger detonated two car bombs simultaneously on Thursday, 
one inside a military camp in the city of Agadez and another in the remote town 
of Arlit at a French-operated uranium mine, killing a total of 26 people and 
injuring 30, according to officials in Niger and France.

A surviving attacker took a group of soldier’s hostage, and authorities were 
attempting to negotiate their release.

The timing of the attacks, which occurred at the same moment more than 100 
miles apart, and the fact that the bombers were able to penetrate both a 
well-guarded military installation and a sensitive, foreign-operated uranium 
mine, highlight the growing reach and sophistication of the Islamic extremists 
based in neighboring Mali. The Mali jihadists have vowed to avenge a French-led 
military intervention that ousted them from Mali’s northern cities.

Both attacks were claimed by a spinoff of al-Qaida’s local chapter, the 
Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa, or MUJAO, said French radio RFI.

The highest toll was in the desert city of Agadez, located almost 1,000 
kilometers (600 miles) northeast of the capital, where the attackers punched 
their explosive-laden car past the defenses at a military garrison and 
detonated inside the base, killing 20 soldiers and 16 others, said Niger’s 
Minister of Defense Mahamadou Karidjo at a hastily assembled press conference 
in the capital, Niamey, on Thursday. Three suicide bombers also died, but a 
fourth escaped and grabbed a group of military cadets, said Interior Minister 
Abdou Labo.

The attacker was draped in an explosive belt and was threatening to blow 
himself up along with his hostages. Labo said by telephone that the military 
was engaging in negotiations with the jihadist. He did not say how many 
hostages were taken.

Over 240 kilometers (150 miles) northeast of Agadez, a different group of two 
suicide bombers slipped past a truck to enter a uranium mine operated by French 
nuclear giant Areva, injuring 14 employees of the French company, one of whom 
died later. Both suicide bombers were also killed, according to a company 
statement, the ministry of defense and witnesses.

When France scrambled war planes over Mali and sent in ground troops to try to 
take back the country’s al-Qaida-held north, the extremists vowed to hit back 
not just at French interests all over the world, but also at the African 
governments that helped them. The bomb blasts on Thursday are the most damaging 
attacks by the Mali-based jihadists to date and succeeded in hitting both an 
important French asset and the military of Niger, which sent 650 troops to help 
France combat the Islamists in Mali.

Up until Thursday’s twin attacks, some military analysts had begun to doubt the 
strength of groups like MUJAO, which has carried out repeated suicide attacks 
in Mali since January with varying degrees of success. Several of the kamikaze 
operations succeeded in killing only the bombers themselves. Shaken, the 
government of Niger has decreed a 72-hour period of national mourning following 
the heavy toll from Thursday’s attack.

Residents in the two towns immediately remarked on how closely coordinated the 
attacks appear to have been, taking place just moments apart at 5:30 a.m., a 
time when many in this majority Muslim nation are prostrating themselves in the 
first prayer of the day.

Alhousseiny Moussa, a resident of Agadez, was walking to the mosque to pray 
when he heard the boom coming from the city’s military camp. “I heard the 
explosion and immediately after, I heard a volley of gunfire. The area where it 
happened was inside the military camp and it’s now been roped off so we cannot 
go in. It was right at 5:30 a.m.,” he said.

Another resident of Agadez, a city situated on the sandy fringe of the Sahara 
desert, said the car bomb awoke anyone who was still sleeping. “We heard a 
strong detonation that woke the whole neighborhood, it was so powerful,” 
explained Abdoulaye Harouna. “The whole town is now surrounded by soldiers 
looking for the attackers.”

Al-Qaida’s affiliate in Africa and groups allied with them seized the northern 
half of Mali in April of last year. They pushed into the major towns, setting 
up their own administration. But for nearly a decade before that, they had 
already made themselves at home in Mali, using its remote, and lawless northern 
reaches to train fighters and to hold the European hostages they kidnapped - 
including many from Niger. In 2008, they grabbed two Canadians on the outskirts 
of Niger’s capital, including United Nations special envoy Robert Fowler, who 
was held for 130 days before a ransom was negotiated. Two years later, al-Qaida 
in the Islamic Maghreb infiltrated the mining town of Arlit, which was the 
scene of Thursday’s car bombing, grabbing seven employees of French company 
Areva, and one of its contractors, SATOM, as well as the wife of one of the 
workers.

Four of them - all French nationals - are still being held by the terror cell 
and their whereabouts are unknown. The terror group has repeatedly threatened 
to execute them in retaliation for the French-led intervention in Mali.

On Thursday at 5:30 a.m., an all-terrain Toyota sports-utility vehicle 
penetrated the SOMAIR mine, where Areva is extracting uranium in Arlit, located 
1,200 kilometers (750 miles) to the north of the capital, Niamey, according to 
residents. The car exploded not far from the machinery used at the mine.

“We saw a car enter the factory and immediately it exploded,” said Agoumou Idi, 
a worker inside the factory who was reached by telephone. “The terrorists, 
probably from MUJAO, took advantage of the fact that the entrance gate was open 
in order to let in a truck carrying the next shift of workers. They used that 
opening to enter the heart of our factory and explode their vehicle.”

In Agadez, the sand-enveloped streets were barricaded, as was the entrance to 
the hospital, where the dead and injured soldiers were presumably taken. No one 
could approach the military base where the standoff with the suicide bomber 
holding the hostages was ongoing on Thursday afternoon.
 


 


________________________________
 From: Bukan Pedanda <[email protected]>
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Thursday, May 23, 2013 12:29 PM
Subject: [proletar] France24: Suicide bombing targets military, Areva sites in 
Niger
 


  


Perbuatan orang Islam lagi?

Belum tentu.

Kita tunggu berita selanjutnya dah.. 
________________________________

Suicide bombing targets military, Areva sites in Niger
By News Wires the 23/05/2013 - 10:07

Twin suicide attacks have targeted separate sites in Niger, FRANCE 24's sister 
network RFI reports. The bombs 
struck a Nigerian army barracks in Agadez and a plant belonging to 
French nuclear energy giant Areva in the town of Arlit. 
Twin suicide attacks have targeted 
separate sites in Niger, FRANCE 24's sister network RFI reported on 
Thursday. The bombs struck a Nigerian army barracks in Agadez and a 
plant belonging to French nuclear energy giant Areva in the town of 
Arlit, officials and company sources said.
Military sources said several soldiers were killed in a gun battle 
with Islamists following a car bomb attack at the barracks in Agadez, 
the largest town in northern Niger.
"There was an explosion in front of the military base at Agadez," Defence 
Minister Mahamadou Karidjo told AFP.
At around the same time, a "four-by-four packed with explosives" blew up at the 
Areva site at Arlit, some 250 kilometres (150 miles) to the 
north, injuring at least 13 people, Areva sources said.

The French maker of nuclear reactors condemned what it called a 
“despicable attack” and said it was working closely with authorities in 
Niger and French forces.
A spokesman for the Nigerien government, Morou Amadou, said the 
attacks were carried out by Islamist militants, probably by Al Qaeda in 
the Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM. Its West African splinter group MUJAO, 
which seized control of northern regions of neighbouring Mali last year 
before being ousted by a French-led offensive launched in January, may 
also have been involved, he said.
“These are terrorists who have carried out the suicide attacks in 
Agadez and Arlit,” Amadou said. “The terrorists -- I don’t know for sure 
whether it was AQIM or MUJAO -- infiltrated these towns and security 
forces have been deployed and are scouring the area.”
(FRANCE 24 with wires)
________________________________

Source URL: 
http://www.france24.com/en/20130523-double-suicide-attack-niger-areva-agadez-arlit

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