DEADLY SIEGE ENDS: All 20 hostages killed are foreigners, military says

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Dhaka, Bangladesh (CNN) Gunmen seized a bakery in Dhaka overnight, killing 20 hostages and two officers in a standoff that ended Saturday morning, the Bangladeshi military said.

All the hostages killed were foreigners, the military said.
The attackers used guns, explosive devices and “a lot of sharp domestic weapons,” said Brig. Gen. Naeem Ashfaq Chowdhury of the Bangladesh army. The hostages’ bodies were found after the standoff ended more than 10 hours later.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina said 13 hostages were rescued, “We were able to save 13 people, we weren’t able to save a few,” Hasina said at a news conference. Six terrorists were killed and one was captured alive, she said.
Bangladeshi soldiers and security personnel sit on top of armored vehicles as they cordon off an area near a restaurant popular with foreigners after heavily armed militants took dozens of hostages, in a diplomatic zone of the Bangladeshi capital Dhaka, Bangladesh, Saturday, July 2, 2016. Bangladesh forces stormed the Holey Artisan Bakery in Dhaka's Gulshan area Saturday morning, triggering explosions and finding bodies lying in pools of blood.
One Japanese national and two Sri Lankans were among the hostages rescued, officials from both nations said.
The rescued Japanese national was having dinner with seven other colleagues from Japan, who are missing, said Koichii Hagiuda, the deputy chief Cabinet secretary.

Japan has sent Vice Foreign Minister Seiji Kihara , along with a team of terrorism experts, to Dhaka.

Workers jump from roof

Witnesses described chaotic scenes when the gunmen raided the Holey Artisan Bakery. Cafe worker Shumon Reza said he saw six to eight gunmen enter the bakery. He escaped as they came in.
“They were shooting in the air. They didn’t shoot or hit anybody. Just to create fear,” Reza told

Boishakhi TV.
“The guests were all lying on the ground under the chairs and tables. And we (the employees) escaped in whichever safe way we could. Some went to the roof, others went to other safe spots.”
Shortly after, Reza said, the attackers started throwing explosives, one after another.
“We thought it wasn’t safe anymore and jumped from the roof,” he said.
In his office nearby, Ataur Rahman said he heard a series of gunshots as people raced for cover. Some yelled that the gunmen were shouting, “Allahu Akbar!”
Diego Rossini, one of the cafe workers, escaped up the stairs from the kitchen to the terrace, and hid there with 10 other people. Once the attackers started getting closer, Rossini jumped toward adjacent buildings along with the other people.

Rossini told CNN en Español that he was hiding between the restaurant and the building next door when police rescued him.
ISIS has claimed responsibility for the terror attack, according to its media branch, Amaq. But some U.S. officials doubted the claim.

Attack shocks nation

Even in a country that has become increasingly numb to Islamist attacks, the Holey Artisan Bakery standoff was particularly jolting in its brazenness.
It was not so much that the attack took place in a public place, in full view of a horrified public. Such public attacks have happened before — American blogger Avijit Roy was hacked with machetes outside Bangladesh’s largest book fair.
It was not even that the targets were foreigners. That too has happened before – more than once.
It was the time and the location that revolted many everyday Bangladeshis.
The gunmen went into the bakery on a Friday, the holiest day of the week in Islam, and at a time when the devout would be sitting down to break their fast in the holy month of Ramadan.
And they targeted not a bar or a club — the kinds of venues fundamentalist Muslims rail against — but a bakery.

Why did it happen at the bakery?

It’s more likely because of the bakery’s location: Gulshan.
Gulshan is one of Dhaka’s most affluent neighborhoods. Perhaps more importantly for the attackers, it’s a diplomatic enclave. Most of the embassies and high commissions have a presence in Gulshan.
Residents in the neighborhood expressed shock because the upscale neighborhood was considered safe with buildings behind walls, gated driveways and security guard booths.

Holey Artisan Bakery had become a popular destination for expats and diplomats, and attackers may have chosen it hoping for maximum global impact.
“They wanted maximum exposure. They got it,” said Sadrul Kabir, a Gulshan resident.
Home to almost 150 million Muslims, the country had avoided the kind of radicalism plaguing others parts of the world. But in the last two years, a wave of murders across Bangladesh have killed secular writers, academics and religious minorities.
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