MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) — The night of mayhem and death started with
the sound of helicopters above pitch-black fields. When it was over,
the French intelligence agent who had been held hostage for more than
three years was almost certainly dead, as was at least one French
commando, and the home that served as the agent’s final jail was
destroyed. And now the Somalis living in the muddy farm town had new
cause to fear the militants controlling their street.
It was too dark to see beyond the brief glow of flashlights, but
noise was everywhere, said Ali Bulhan, who woke up when the earth
started vibrating to the beat of the helicopter rotors. And the
flashlights were abruptly extinguished when the French soldiers shot the
Somalis who had turned them on to see what was happening in their town
in the dead of night, said town elder Hussein Yasin.
The commandos were there to free a French intelligence agent captured
on Bastille Day in 2009. The man, known by his code-name Denis Allex,
was chained up, abused and moved from one safe house to another, French
Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said Sunday. Le Drian said the
government decided to stage the rescue a month ago, when Allex’s
location seemed to have settled down “in a spot accessible by the sea.”
Helicopters were dispatched from a French ship that had been on an
enforced news blackout for weeks, according to the French newspaper Le
Point. When the commandos arrived in Bulomarer late Friday, children
began screaming in confusion and fighters from the Islamist al-Shabab,
which has controlled the town for years, began racing along the streets,
their cell phones pressed to their ears.
“They had a terrible night as well,” said Ali Bulhan, who refused to give his last name for fear of reprisal.
The local accounts, along with that of a Somali intelligence official
and the French defense minister, offer a glimpse into a chaotic rescue
attempt in which nothing seemed to go as planned.
“Extracting a hostage is extremely difficult,” Le Drian said.
Yasin said the gunbattle started on the ground when the French
commandos encountered an Islamist checkpoint. Al Bulhan said only a few
hours could have passed between that moment and the time when the French
helicopters stopped firing on homes and instead ferried the surviving
French troops to safety “but it felt like an entire day.”
French officials, including the president, and a Somali intelligence
official said Allex was almost certainly killed by his captors. The
intelligence official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he
was not permitted to speak to the press, said Sunday that the home where
the agent was held was destroyed in the attack Saturday, and
that intelligence networks “do not have any information indicating he is
still alive.”
Al-Shabab has offered no proof for its claims that Allex was still
alive and that a wounded French soldier was in its custody as well.
French officials acknowledge a missing soldier, but say they believe he
is dead.
“Bullets rattled every corner,” Ali Bulhan said. “Helicopters were firing at nearby homes.”
The fighting took an even steeper toll on the Islamists, according to
French officials and locals. Ali Bulhan said he thought the fighters
had already taken away the bodies of their comrades. French officials
said they counted 17 dead among the Islamists.
After the sounds of battle faded and the helicopters were gone,
frightened al-Shabab fighters locked down the town, added checkpoints,
arrested junior commanders for fear someone had tipped off the French
foces, and seized cell phones of residents, Ali Bulhan said.
“I was told that the dead French soldier was hiding and was shot
after he turned on a flashlight,” he said. He did not know when, but
later saw the body of a European being dragged into a car.
Businesses shut down for the day Sunday.
“It was a burial day for the fighters,” Ali Bulhan said, “and a deadly day for the French as well.”
Source: AP
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