2015 Corinthia Hotel attack

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Location32°53′50″N 13°10′13″E / 32.89722°N 13.17028°E / 32.89722; 13.17028
Corinthia Hotel Tripoli, Tripoli, Libya
Date27 January 2015 (2015-01-27)
09:00 (UTC+2)
Attack type
car bombing; mass shooting, suicide bombing
Deaths10 (not including the perpetrators)
Corinthia Hotel Attack
The Corinthia Hotel main tower
Location32°53′50″N 13°10′13″E / 32.89722°N 13.17028°E / 32.89722; 13.17028
Corinthia Hotel Tripoli, Tripoli, Libya
Date27 January 2015 (2015-01-27)
09:00 (UTC+2)
Attack type
car bombing; mass shooting, suicide bombing
Deaths10 (not including the perpetrators)
Injured5
Perpetrators Islamic State[1]
Motive2013 arrest of Abu Anas al-Libi by U.S. forces

On 29 January 2015, the Corinthia Hotel in Tripoli was attacked by men affiliated with the Islamic State (IS).[1] The hotel was popular with foreign officials and government workers; it had previously housed the Libyan prime minister.

In the early hours of 27 January 2015, IS-affiliated men detonated a car bomb in the parking garage of the hotel. In the chaos, an estimated 5 gunmen stormed past the local guard and entered the hotel, intent on killing guests.[2]

Some of the attackers survived the initial contact, stormed the hotel and opened fire in the reception area.[3]

Victims

Deaths by nationality
Country Number
 Libya 5
 Tajikistan 3
 France 1
 United States 1
Total 10

Five foreigners died in the attack: one American, one Frenchman, and three Tajiks (including two women). The American, David Berry, was working as a contractor for an American security firm named Crucible. Five Libyan security personnel are also reported to have died in the attack.[4]

Perpetrators and motivations

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI