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Al-Qaeda Threatens France after Ivory Coast Attack

Al-Qaeda Threatens France after Ivory Coast Attack
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Al-Qaeda's North African branch threatened France and its allies fighting against the extremists in the volatile region, in a statement boasting about the group's deadly weekend attack on an Ivory Coast beach resort.

Al-Qaeda Threatens France after Ivory Coast Attack

Relatively, al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb [AQIM] said the shooting rampage at the Grand-Bassam resort on Sunday that left 18 people dead was one of a series of operations "targeting dens of espionage and conspiracies."

The terrorist group further warned that those nations involved in the regional anti-insurgent Operation Barkhane and the 2013 French-led Operation Serval in Mali would "receive a response," with their "criminal leaders" and interests targeted, according to the SITE group which monitors extremist organizations.

The statement was issued by the group on the eve of a Tuesday visit by French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault and Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve to Ivory Coast after the beach attack whose victims included four French nationals.

Barkhane, which succeeded Serval in 2014, has at least 3,500 soldiers deployed across five countries, Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania and Niger, to combat extremist insurgencies.

In the context, AQIM issued a wider threat to Western nationals to leave Muslim lands or "we will destroy your security and the security of your citizens."

The group also claimed the attack on a top hotel and a nearby restaurant in the Burkina Faso capital in January that killed 30 people, and a hostage siege in the Malian capital Bamako in November that cost 20 lives.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

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