Hostages taken at cafe in Dhaka's diplomatic quarter.
Gunmen
stormed a restaurant popular with expatriates in the diplomatic quarter
of the Bangladeshi capital on Friday night and took about 20 people
hostage, including several foreigners, in an attack claimed by Islamic
State.
The
Islamist militant group said more than 20 people had been killed,
although police have so far confirmed the deaths of two policemen.
In
the latest flare-up of Islamist militant violence to hit the South
Asian nation, police said eight to nine gunmen attacked the Holey
Artisan restaurant in the upscale Gulshan area of Dhaka.
The
assailants, believed to be carrying assault rifles and grenades,
exchanged sporadic fire with police outside, hours after the attack
began around 9 p.m. local time.
Two
police officials died in the attack and at least 15 people were
injured, police said. A duty officer at the Rapid Action Battalion's
control room in Dhaka said the gun battles had stopped and the hostages
were unharmed.
Earlier, Benjir Ahmed,
the chief of Bangladesh's special police force, said police were
preparing to launch an operation to rescue those being held captive.
Ahmed said the attackers had hurled bombs at police.
Television
footage showed a number of police being led away from the site with
blood on their faces and clothes. Heavily armed officers could be seen
milling outside.
A resident near the scene of the attack told Reuters he could hear sporadic gunfire nearly three hours after the attack began.
"It is chaos out there. The streets are blocked. There are dozens of police commandos," said Tarique Mir.
Bangladesh
has seen an increase in militant violence in the last year-and-a-half,
with a series of deadly attacks targeting atheists, gays, liberals,
foreigners and members of religious minorities in the mostly Muslim
country of 160 million people.
They
have tended to be assaults on individuals, often using machetes, and
the raid on the restaurant was a rare instance of a more coordinated
operation.
Militants killed two foreigners last year, leading several Western firms involved in the country's $25 billion garment sector to temporarily halt visits to Dhaka.
The U.S. State Department said all Americans working at the U.S. mission there had been accounted for. A spokesman said in Washington the situation was "very fluid, very live".
President Barack Obama has also been briefed about the attack, the White House said.
The German embassy in Dhaka is trying to determine if any German citizens were affected by the attack, a spokesman for the German foreign ministry said late Friday.
0 comments:
Post a Comment