Burkina Faso hostage rescue

On May 9, 2019, French Navy Commando Hubert, supported by the United States Africa Command, conducted a rescue operation in Northern Burkina Faso, that resulted in the deaths of two French petty officers, four out of six gunmen, and the recovery of all four hostages of French, American, and South Korean nationality.[2][3][4]

Burkina Faso hostage rescue
Part of Operation Barkhane, Terrorism in Burkina Faso
Date9 – 10 May 2019
Location
Result

Mission successful

  • Hostages rescued
  • Two CASM operators killed
Belligerents
 France
Supported by:
 United States (intelligence support)
 Burkina Faso (logistical support)
Islamic State of the Great Sahara (EIGS)[1]
Units involved

Commandos Marine

  • CASM
Strength
24 naval commandoes
Several helicopters
MQ-9 Reaper drones
6 gunmen
Casualties and losses
2 killed 4 killed[1]
4 hostages freed

Background

The hostage situation included four hostages of French, American, and South Korean nationality.[5] Patrick Picque and Laurent Lassimouillas, two French music teachers, were kidnapped on May 1 while vacationing in Pendjari National Park in Benin.[6] Their tour guide was found killed and their car had been burned. Meanwhile, the South Korean and American hostages, whose identities have not been released, were abducted while crossing together from Benin into Burkina Faso, about one month earlier.[7]

Rescue

While the terrorist organization behind the hostage crisis was unidentified, French military believe that the hostages were about to handed to the Macina Liberation Front, a terrorist organization in Mali.[5] Before the rescue, the abductors had been moving northbound through Burkina Faso, but had set up camp overnight in the Sahel region.[8]

The hostage rescue occurred during the night on May 9, 2019.[6] French special forces approached the abductors' camp, covering 200 meters of open ground before being noticed 10 meters away. Two special forces soldiers, Cédric de Pierrepont, 32, and Alain Bertoncello, 27, died during the rescue, as did four of the militants. Both operatives belonged to Commando d'Action Sous-Marine Hubert, or CASM.[9]

Aftermath

Funeral procession for the fallen French operators in Paris on May 14.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.