Police
in Gabon have arrested dozens of people on Sunday over a knife attack in the
capital apparently committed in retribution for “US attacks against Muslims”
following Trump’s policy shift regarding Jerusalem, officials said.
The
men detained were mostly traders and sellers in the popular market in
Libreville where the attack occurred on Saturday and all are from west Africa,
according to an AFP correspondent. The two men, who were working for
the National Geographic channel, were stabbed while shopping in a market
popular with tourists, said defence minister Etienne Massard, adding that the
attack appeared to be politically motivated. "Following this cowardly and
despicable act, the government wishes to assure the people that Gabon will not
become a theatre for attacks against our way of life"
“According
to the first testimonies at the scene, the assailant, a 53-year-old
Nigerien man, shouted ‘Allahu Akbar’ (“God is Greatest”) during the
attack. He was arrested on the spot,” said Massard. The man, who has lived in
Gabon for 19 years, “in his first statements said he acted in retaliation for
US attacks against Muslims and America’s recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s
capital”.
The
two victims were sent to a hospital in the capital Libreville, one in a serious
condition, government spokesman Alain-Claude Bilie By Nze told AFP. The
Danish foreign ministry confirmed two nationals had been “wounded in Gabon”
without giving any further details.
Massard
said the government was treating the attack as “an isolated act” and said an
investigation had been launched. “Following this cowardly and despicable act,
the government wishes to assure the people that Gabon will not become a theatre
for attacks against our way of life,” he said in a televised address. “Everything
will be done to ensure that the perpetrator and any accomplices are punished to
the full extent of the law.”
Gabon, a
small French-speaking former colony with 1.8 million inhabitants, has so far
been spared the Islamist-inspired attacks that have taken place in some
neighbouring countries.
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