Eight Japanese citizens were among the hostages taken by gunmen in Dhaka late Friday before Bangladeshi forces stormed a restaurant in the capital’s diplomatic zone Saturday, ending the attack and rescuing at least one of the Japanese nationals, a high-ranking official said in Tokyo.
Japan, however, has been unable to contact the remaining seven, Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Koichi Hagiuda told reporters.
The eight are employees of private firms engaged in a Japan International Cooperation Agency(JICA) construction project.
The man who survived the hostage crisis was shot, and was being treated at a hospital, Hagiuda said, adding he was in stable condition. Japanese officials in Dhaka had met with the man, whose name is being withheld.
JICA had earlier said it was unable to contact eight Japanese workers in the country as of Saturday afternoon and was working to confirm their locations.
Separately, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe spoke with his Bangladeshi counterpart, Sheikh Hasina, over phone. She told Abe that 13 people were rescued, including three foreigners, Hagiuda said.
Media reports had earlier said a group of about nine assailants armed with guns and explosives had attacked the restaurant Friday night, killing two police officers and taking at least 20 hostages.
According to The Associated Press, five bodies were found in a pool of blood by army troops and policemen who stormed the cafe.
The AP also reported that the Islamic State group’s Amaq News Agency said “Islamic State commandos” had carried out the attack, according to the SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors jihadi activity online. The claim could not be independently confirmed.
The restaurant where the gunmen had been holed up is located near the Japanese Embassy in Dhaka, public broadcaster NHK reported. According to the Japanese Embassy, 906 Japanese were living in Bangladesh as of October 2015.
Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga told a hastily gathered news conference earlier Saturday that Japanese may have been among the hostages.
Suga said the government was making “utmost efforts” to gather information on the situation, adding that Tokyo would dispatch to Dhaka staffers from a government team in charge of gathering information on international terrorism.
The same unit was dispatched when a hostage crisis erupted in Algeria in 2013. Thirty-nine hostages — including 10 Japanese — were killed during the siege on Islamist militants who had taken over a gas plant in the country.
Later Saturday, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe met reporters at the Prime Minister’s Office in Tokyo, saying he had ordered his staff to make saving lives “a top priority.” Abe had earlier ordered his staff to gather information and cancelled his scheduled trip to Hokkaido, part of a campaign blitz for the July 10 Upper House election.
Japantimes