MAIDUGURI: Cameroonian President Paul Biya ordered
"all measures" be taken to find the kidnappers of seven French tourists,
as an official said the French military is helping hunt for the
assailants.
The tourists, including four children, were seized Wednesday
at the village of Dabanga, about 960 kilometres northeast of the
capital, Yaounde, after visiting the Waza National Park in the Far North
Region that borders Nigeria and Chad. They have been taken to Maiduguri
in northern Nigeria, Far North Region Governor Awah Fonka Augustine
said.
"A contingent of French military has already arrived in
Dabanga by air and is working in collaboration with Cameroonian forces
to track down the four assailants," Mr Augustine said. Nigerian troops
are on alert to intercept the gunmen if they're seen in the country's
territory, Sagir Musa, a military spokesman, said Wednesday.
The kidnappings came a day after an Islamist group in Nigeria
claimed responsibility for taking seven foreigners hostage at a
construction site in the northern state of Bauchi. The hostages,
including three Lebanese, a Filipino, a UK national, a Greek and an
Italian, work for Setraco Nigeria Ltd., Hassan Mohammed, a police
spokesman, said on February 17.
Construction Workers
Jamaatu Ansarul Muslimina Fi Biladissudan, or "Vanguards for
the Protection of Muslims in the Land of the Blacks," the group that
took the construction workers hostage, said that its action was in
response to "the transgressions and atrocities done to the religion of
Allah" by European nations in countries such as Mali and Afghanistan.
France has about 4000 troops in Mali, where it intervened to
fight Islamists and rebel forces to restore state control over a nation
that vies with Tanzania as Africa's third-biggest gold producer.
Fighting between French special forces and Islamist militants is now in
the "final phase" and France will start withdrawing troops in a few
weeks, Defense Minister Jean- Yves Le Drian said. He wouldn't say if the
attack in Cameroon is linked to French intervention in Mali.
GDF Suez SA, the French utility that's building a liquid
natural gas project in southern Cameroon, said the kidnapped tourists
include one of its employees and family.
Guarantee Safety
"Nothing would be worse than conceding to the terrorists,"
French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said during a parliamentary
debate in Paris Wednesday.
French President Francois Hollande said security was being stepped up in Africa for his country's nationals.
"The Cameroon government remains in permanent contact with
the Nigerian and French governments," Cameroon's External Relations
Ministry said. "All is being put in place to guarantee the security of
foreigners, notably tourists in Cameroon."
Nigerian troops along the northeastern border with Cameroon
have been made aware of the attack on tourists, said military spokesman
Mr Musa. "We're not leaving anything to chance in our quest to flush out
the terrorists."
Bloomberg
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