News update
  • ‘With Science, We Can Feed the World of 9.7 Billion by 2050′     |     
  • WHO warns of severe disruptions to health services for funding cuts     |     
  • ICJ hears Sudan’s case accusing UAE of ‘complicity in genocide’     |     
  • Bombardment, deprivation and displacement continue in Gaza     |     
  • Aged and Alone: The hidden pains in old age homes     |     

22 people killed in attack in western Niger: local sources

GreenWatch Desk Conflicts 2024-01-30, 9:49am

image-170717-1706583079-dca7825b37cb2cfa94d5d36c67a8092f1706586627.jpg




Suspected jihadists killed 22 people in an attack on a village in western Niger near the border with Mali, local sources told AFP on Monday.

The Sunday attack targeted the village of Motogatta in the vast Tillaberi region where Niger meets Mali and Burkina Faso, and where jihadist groups have been active for years.
"Unfortunately, 22 people died in the attack, including some self-defence militiamen," a local elected official said.
The toll was confirmed by a resident of a nearby town.
The official said that the attackers arrived on motorbikes in the village around 4 pm (1500 GMT).
"They started shooting, killing people on the spot," he said.
Niger is battling two jihadist insurgencies -- a spillover in its southeast from a long-running conflict in neighbouring Nigeria, and an offensive in the west by militants crossing from Mali and Burkina Faso.
When military leaders overthrew democratically elected president Mohamed Bazoum on July 26, they cited the deterioration of the security situation in the country as justification, reports BSS.
On December 17, coup leader General Abdourahamane Tiani said the security situation was "progressively normalising" after the army's "multiple successes" in quelling unrest.