Niamey – An attack by suspected jihadists on a village in western Niger’s troubled “three-border” region has killed 19 people and injured two, the Nigerien interior ministry said on Saturday.
“The attack targeted civilians as they were finishing their (evening) prayers,” the ministry said in a statement read out on public radio.
It was carried out “at around 21:00 (2000 GMT)” on Friday in the village of Theim in the Tillaberi region “by armed individuals who arrived on foot and have not yet been identified”, it said.
Earlier, a local official had put the death toll at 17 and five wounded, while a resident in regional capital Tillaberi said around 10 people had been killed.
Thiem is around 20km from three other villages where a series of attacks in May by jihadists linked to the Islamic State forced more than 11 000 inhabitants to flee.
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MPs from the region called Friday for increased security measures for the area, saying that jihadists behind the wave of attacks in the vast Tillaberi region are able to operate freely in spite of strict government controls.
In one month, 98 civilians and 19 gendarmes have been killed in just three departments of the region, they said.
To combat rising attacks, Niger has declared a state of emergency, banned the movement of motorbikes, regulated the sale of fuel and closed markets suspected of supplying armed groups, they said.
The “three-borders” region is a huge territory straddling the frontiers of Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso that has long been troubled by land feuds, trafficking, desertification and fragile state presence.
The vast arid region, along with central Mali, has become the worst-hit area in the jihadists’ nine-year-old campaign in the Sahel.
Thousands of people have died and tens of thousands have fled their homes.
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Picture: Getty Images
Source: AFP
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