Bamako – Jihadist attacks at a notorious flashpoint in eastern-central Mali have claimed dozens of lives, the UN’s peacekeeping force in Mali said.
“The security situation in the tri-border area between Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso, particularly in the localities of Tessit, Talataye, Ansongo and the Menaka region, has deteriorated considerably in recent weeks,” the MINUSMA force said in a statement issued late Thursday.
“Attacks by armed terrorist groups have had a devastating impact on the already distressed civilian population, resulting in dozens of deaths and significant displacement of populations to Gao and Ansongo,” it said.
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MINUSMA said it had “deployed a unit to the area for over a week and is in the process of deploying another today”.
The tri-border region is a lawless, arid area where the frontiers of Burkina Faso, Niger and Mali converge.
It has been gripped by violence since 2015, when jihadists in northern Mali regrouped after being scattered by French military intervention and extended their campaign into neighbouring countries.
Groups affiliated to al-Qaeda and the Islamic State (ISIS) organisation are frequently accused of attacking civilians suspected of being informants or collaborators.
The IS media outlet an-Naba, in a text authenticated by the specialist US organisation SITE, said jihadists from the newly proclaimed “Sahel province” have carried out a string of attacks on the Coordination of Movements of Azawad (CMA) an alliance of separatist Tuaregs and nationalist Arabs.
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Around 250 CMA fighters were killed around Menaka between March 9 and 11, and three of their bases, in Tamalat, Inchinane and Anderamboukane, were overrun, it said.
An-Naba also claimed that jihadists “killed and wounded dozens” of Malian troops in an attack on an army base at Gao.
According to UN figures published on March 24, nearly 600 civilians died in Mali last year, mainly in acts attributed to jihadists, but also to self-defence militias and the armed forces.
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Source: AFP
Picture: Unsplash
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