Mali Radisson Blu attack: Two Islamists sentenced to death

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Malian troops take position outside the Radisson Blu hotel in Bamako on November 20, 2015.Image source, AFP
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In November 2015 militants stormed the Radisson Blu hotel in Bamako, taking 170 people hostage and killing 20

A court in Mali has sentenced two men to death over attacks that targeted foreigners in the capital in 2015.

At least 25 people died when gunmen stormed a nightclub in Bamako in March of that year and the Radisson Blu hotel in November.

One of the defendants told the court he was "proud" of his part in the attacks, which were claimed by a jihadist group.

It was a rare trial of jihadists in a country which has been fighting an Islamist insurgency since 2012.

French soldiers have been helping the Malian army, but the government has not been able to take full control of the country.

Fawaz Ould Ahmeida, a Mauritanian militant, said he had attacked La Terrasse nightclub in revenge for cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad published by France's Charlie Hebdo magazine.

Three Malians, a Frenchman and a Belgian were killed in that assault. Ahmeida's Malian co-defendant, Sadou Chaka, was also sentenced to death for his part in it.

Image source, AFP
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Fawaz Ould Ahmeida was arrested in a suburb of Bamako in 2016

Ahmeida was also accused of plotting the Radisson Blu attack.

Two armed men held 170 guests and staff hostage at the during the nine-hour hotel siege, killing at least 20 before security forces stormed the building.

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Rescued hostage: "I heard gunshots very early in the morning"

Nine Malians, a Russian flight crew, Chinese construction executives, a Belgian politician and an American aid worker were among those killed.

Both attacks were claimed by al-Murabitoun, a West African jihadist group.