Africa: Blacks slaughtering Blacks: Sahel: Mass killings continue, another deadly week in Mali and Niger


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2005: S.Africa: Coffin industry booming due to AIDS
AIDS was killing Blacks a lot 20+ years ago. Coffin and related industries were booming across Africa, especially north of South Africa.


[The White man is gone. Colonialism is gone … but the killing has started! No Whites were involved in creating these wars and problems. Jan]

58 CIVILIANS KILLED IN NIGER THIS WEEK

By Boureima Hama: Fifty-eight people have been killed in “barbarous” attacks on a bus and nearby villages in Niger close to the country’s border with Mali, the government said on Tuesday. On Monday afternoon, “groups of armed, still unidentified individuals intercepted four vehicles carrying passengers back from the weekly market of Banibangou to the villages of Chinedogar and Darey-Daye,” the government said in a statement read out on public television.

“The toll from these barbarous acts (is) 58 dead, one injured, a number of grain silos and two vehicles burned and two more vehicles seized,” it added. No group claimed responsibility, but Niger is struggling with two jihadist campaigns — in the west near Mali and Burkina Faso, and a decade-old insurgency in the southeast on the border with Nigeria.

The raids took place in the Tillaberi region located in the “tri-border area” — a flashpoint zone where the frontiers of Niger, Burkina Faso and Mali converge. Earlier, a local resident had told AFP that the raids began with an attack on a bus travelling to Chinedogar, in which “around 20 people were killed.” Another resident said those killed had been shopping at Banibangou, a major market town just a few kilometres (miles) from the Malian border. “Armed bandits” then attacked villages at around 6 pm, killing about 30 people, a security source said.

The government announced three days of national mourning from Wednesday. It called for “greater vigilance” from the population and reaffirmed its “determination to relentlessly pursue the fight against criminality in all its forms”.

SAHEL VIOLENCE

Niger is part of a France-backed alliance of countries in the Sahel region battling militants, including some in a group aligned with the Islamic State known as ISWAP — an offshoot of Boko Haram. Hundreds of lives have been lost, nearly half a million people have fled their homes, and devastating damage has been inflicted. On January 2, 100 people were killed in attacks on two villages in the Mangaize district of Tillaberi.

The massacre, one of the worst in Niger’s history, occurred between two rounds of the country’s presidential election. In December 2019, 71 Nigerien troops died in an attack at Inates, and the following month 89 were killed in an assault on their base at Chinedogar. Along with central Mali, the lawless tri-border area sees the most frequent and deadliest jihadist attacks anywhere in the Sahel region. French forces working with local troops have stepped up operations in the region since early 2020, following the string of attacks on military camps that killed hundreds of soldiers.

AFP

MALI: RAIDS ON ARMY POST NEAR ANSONGO CLAIM LIVES OF 33 SOLDIERS

By Serge Daniel – At least 33 soldiers were killed in an attack in northern Mali this week, an army officer aid, after one of two devastating attacks in the Sahel region since Monday. Dozens of assailants on motorbikes and pickup trucks on Monday stormed a military post southwest of the town of Ansongo, near the borders with Burkina Faso and Niger, the army said on social media.

The attack came on the same day as a brutal massacre of 58 civilians just 100 kilometres (60 miles) away in Niger, where militants attacked four buses carrying villagers returning from a market in the west of the Sahel state.

The military said on social media at around midday on Wednesday that the death toll had climbed to 33 soldiers, with 14 wounded in a force that has lost hundreds of men in recent years. A Malian army commander, who requested anonymity, told AFP earlier that the wounded had been transported to the nearby northern city of Gao.

Much of the central Sahel has been locked in a vicious conflict between state forces, jihadists and ethnic militias for years, in a battle which shows no sign of abating. Islamist fighters in the Sahel first emerged in northern Mali in 2012, during a rebellion by ethnic Touareg separatists that was later overtaken by the jihadists.

France intervened to crush the rebellion, but the jihadists scattered and regrouped, taking their campaign into central Mali in 2015 and then into neighbouring Niger and Burkina Faso. Militants frequently target Mali’s army, which is largely underfunded and poorly equipped. Monday’s attack against the soldiers represents the largest single loss of life for Mali’s military this year.

RISING DEATH TOLL

An initial statement following the attack on the military outpost said that two soldiers had been killed and eight wounded, but late on Tuesday the army gave the higher casualty figures, specifying 11 dead and 14 injured with 11 still missing.

On Wednesday the death toll rose further when the Malian commander said that 31 soldiers had been killed. Other sources cited an even higher death toll: An official document consulted by AFP reported 33 dead and 14 wounded. And a local politician who requested anonymity said 34 soldiers were killed. It remains unclear how many soldiers are still missing.
According to a report posted by the army on social media, a military post in the Tessit area, southwest of Ansongo, was ambushed by 100 men in trucks and motorcycles. Twenty jihadists were later found dead after the clashes, the armed forces said.

French army spokesman Frederic Barbry said his country’s Barkhane forces carried out two air strikes on Tuesday against militants spotted riding motorcycles in Tessit, “neutralising” around 10.

Matthieu Pellerin, a researcher at the International Crisis Group think tank, said that “for the past year, control of the Tessit zone has changed hands depending on clashes” between the Islamic State in the Greater Sahara (EIGS) and the Support Group for Islam and Muslims (GSIM, an Al-Qaeda affiliate). “The GSIM recently withdrew from southern Tessit, leaving the area open for the EIGS,” said.

Heavy losses have also been inflicted on United Nations peacekeepers and French troops in Sahel over the past several months. Twenty-eight United Nations peacekeepers were killed in an attack in central Mali in February. France, which has 5,100 troops deployed across the Sahel, also lost five soldiers to roadside bombs in since December.

DEADLY BORDER ZONE

Much of the recent violence has been centred in the “three-border zone” linking Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger. France and its military allies in the Sahel launched an offensive in the lawless region early last year, aiming to flush out jihadists, especially fighters linked to the Islamic State group.

The French government — which is mulling a troop drawdown in the Sahel — argues that it has significantly weakened jihadist groups in the Sahel. It announced in January, for example, that it had killed about 100 militants during a recent push in the border zone. Yet attacks on government targets have continued. The area around Ansongo — where Monday’s ambush against Malian troops occurred — is considered a hotspot for Islamic State group activity.

AFP
Source: http://north-africa.com/2021/03/sahel-mass-killings-continue-another-deadly-week-in-mali-and-niger/


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