A U.S. citizen died in the
attack on a luxury hotel in Bamako, Mali, where armed Islamist militants took
hostages on Friday, the U.S. State Department said.
Six Americans were recovered
safely and U.S. special forces assisted in the rescue efforts, U.S. officials
said earlier.
The State Department, in a
statement, identified the victim as Anita Datar. It included a separate comment
from her family that said she was an aid worker who "has spent much of her
career working to advance global health and international development, with a
focus on population and reproductive health, family planning, and HIV."
The family said she was
survived by a son, her parents, brother "and many, many friends around the
world."
It said she was a senior
manager at Palladium Group and a founding member of Tulalens, a not-for-profit
organization connecting underserved communities with health services.
Early on Friday morning,
gunmen shouting Islamic slogans attacked the Radisson Blu hotel, which is
frequented by foreigners, taking 170 people hostage in Bamako, the country's
capital. At least 27 people were reported dead after Malian commandos stormed
the hotel and dozens of people were reported to have escaped or been freed.
Representatives for U.S.
Africa Command said American military personnel were helping move civilians to
safety as Malian forces cleared the Radisson Blu.
"Mali forces have the
lead in Bamako," Africa Command said in a tweet. "Small team of U.S.
troops assisting with relocating rescued hostages."
Army Colonel Mark Cheadle, a
spokesman for Africa Command, said six Americans were recovered from the hotel
and he believed all were alive.
Another defense official,
speaking on condition of anonymity, said five U.S. Defense Department personnel
were at the hotel at the time of the siege and all have been accounted for.
"We have no reports of any injuries," the official said.
One U.S. service member
"who was at the location stepped in to assist first responders with moving
civilians from the hotel to secure locations as Malian forces worked to clear
the hotel of hostile gunmen," the official said. "U.S. forces did not
directly participate in the operation."
A senior U.S. official said a
security officer and a number of U.S. troops assigned to the U.S. Embassy in
Bamako, who were in the area of the hotel at the time, were among the first on
the scene.
The official said that when
the U.S. security officer and troops entered the building to look for Americans
inside, it was filled with smoke from a fire in the hotel kitchen.
“The first person they could
not locate visually due to smoke but could hear the person,” the official said.
The officers went to the third floor of the building, working their way down,
helping to evacuate people.
“They could not get above the
third floor initially because (attackers) had barricaded the stairs,” the
official added.
The total number of U.S.
citizens at the hotel during the siege was unclear.
In all, the defense official
said, 22 military and civilian Pentagon employees were in Bamako at the time of
the attack and all have been accounted for.
About 1,000 U.S. special forces
are deployed across Africa at any given time.
A Malian official told French
television station BFMTV that all remaining hostages were safe and out of the
hotel.
The U.S. military was
providing airlift support and aerial reconnaissance support to French forces in
Mali under a 2013 agreement, Africa Command said.
U.S. President Barack Obama,
who is attending a regional summit in Malaysia, was briefed by his national
security adviser on the Bamako situation, a White House official said on
Friday.
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