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TERROR WARS
Benin boosts security over 'terrorist threat' warning
by Staff Writers
Cotonou (AFP) June 15, 2016


Marine veteran helped save dozens in Florida attack
Orlando (AFP) June 15, 2016 - A former US Marine who served in Afghanistan helped save dozens of people during the massacre in a Florida nightclub after he managed to react calmly on hearing the sound of high-caliber gunfire.

Imran Yousuf, 24, was working as a bouncer at the Pulse nightclub when the worst mass shooting in US history started to unfold early Sunday.

In an interview with CBS News, he said he heard gunshots ring out shortly after the bar had issued its last call for drinks.

"Three of four shots go off, and you could tell it was a high caliber, there's no way that would have been a pistol or something else," he said.

He described how a large group of panicked clubbers squeezed into a back hallway -- but were blocked from leaving by a latched door.

"The shots kept going off. I'm just screaming 'Open the door! Open the door!' And no one is moving because they are scared," he said.

"Either we all stay there and we all die ... I jumped over, opened that latch and we got everyone that we can out of there."

Yousuf, who is a Hindu, said about 60 or 70 people were able to escape through the door.

"As soon as people found out that door was open, they kept just pouring out," he said.

Forty-nine people died in the Pulse nightclub in Orlando when gunman Omar Mateen sprayed the venue with bullets during a three-hour siege.

The authorities said Mateen, a US citizen of Afghan parents, was radicalized by Islamist propaganda.

His motive remains unclear, however, as news reports say Mateen had been a Pulse regular and used gay dating apps.

Yousuf, a former sergeant, attributed his relative calm to six years in the Marines and his tour in Afghanistan.

"When the day comes, you are going to see what you are made of, I think I reacted the best I could," he said.

"I wish I could've saved more... there's a lot of people that are dead."

Benin has put its security forces on alert after being warned of a "new terrorist threat", according to an internal armed forces memo and a senior army officer contacted by AFP Wednesday.

The internal communication, which was leaked and published by several news organisations, ordered enhanced security and vigilance, particularly in border areas.

The head of Benin's army, General Awal Nagnimi told RFI radio it was a routine message sent to defence and security forces that should never have been published.

But according to a senior commander, the army "redoubled vigilance" last week after "a foreign country warned of a threat of terrorist attack".

The commander, who asked to remain anonymous, did not elaborate and said he did not know whether it was linked to Benin's involvement in a regional force against Boko Haram Islamists.

Benin has joined Nigeria and its neighbours Niger, Cameroon and Chad in a new Multi-National Joint Task Force (MNJTF) to operate in the Lake Chad area.

Africa security analyst Ryan Cummings said a link to the Boko Haram conflict was unlikely as the 8,500-strong MNJTF had yet to formally deploy.

There was also "minimal evidence" of the militants' capacity to operate outside northeast Nigeria and the Lake Chad region", he added.

A number of West African countries, however, have enhanced security after an attack claimed by Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) in Ivory Coast in March which killed 19.

Ghana and Togo in April beefed up security, again following a leaked intelligence report that indicated Islamists were likely to launch their next attacks in those countries.

Cummings said: "In terms of Benin, apart from being a former French colony, the country's domestic and foreign policy seems to provide little incentive for it to be targeted in an AQIM attack.

"It is not involved in regional counter-terrorism operations, has no history of Salafist jihadism/Wahhabist Islamist fundamentalism (or domestic policies curtailing the school of thought) and is not proximate to AQIM's traditional operating zone which is very much tied to areas sharing borders with Mali," he wrote in an email.


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