Tourists sexually assaulted in Senegal's Casamance region
A group of European tourists have
been robbed and sexually assaulted while driving through the Casamance
region of southern Senegal, an official says.
Armed men stopped the car as it was in the town of Diouloulou and assaulted three of the four tourists.
Earlier this month, 14 people were killed in Casamance, which has been hit by a 25-year separatist rebellion.
Security had improved in Casamance in recent years and tourists had started to return to the picturesque region.
Tourism is one of Senegal's biggest foreign-exchange earners and violent attacks on tourists are not common.
The four Europeans were being driven through Casamance near the
border with The Gambia when the armed men attacked, the commander of the
gendarmerie paramilitary force in Diouloulou, Mamadou Samba, told the
Senegalese Press Agency (APS).
They also made off with 4,400 euro ($5,480; £3,850) and 315,000 CFA francs ($595; £420).
One of the tourists is currently undergoing medical examinations following the sexual assault.
The Senegalese police and army are currently looking for the perpetrators.
The
attack came a day after officials announced they had arrested and
charged 24 people over the deaths of 14 villagers in the town of
Borofaye in Casamance.
The group had been collecting firewood when gunmen attacked on 6 January, wounding a further seven people.
Among
the detainees is a member of the Movement of Democratic Forces for
Casamance (MFDC), a separatist group that has been fighting for
independence since 1982.
Hundreds have died in the ongoing
conflict between the MFDC and the Senegalese government, though fighting
has declined in recent years following a 2014 ceasefire.
Once home to a booming tourism industry, Casamance is separated from the Senegalese capital, Dakar, by The Gambia.
BBC
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