HighlightWorld News

Gunmen Kill 13 Nigerien Gendarmes Near Mali Border

752

Gunmen on pick-up trucks and motorcycles coming from Mali killed 13 gendarmes and wounded five more in an attack on their base in western Niger, security sources said on Saturday.

The village is a few dozen kilometers (miles) from where militants killed four US soldiers in an ambush on Oct. 4 that has thrown a spotlight on a US counter-terrorism mission in Niger, a country that straddles an expanse of the Sahara.

Niger’s military officials confirmed the attack. The assailants crossed over the border from Mali and drove up to the village of Ayorou, about 40 km (25 miles) inside, before springing their attack, the security sources said.

“They were heavily armed. They had rocket launchers and machine guns. They came in four vehicles each with about seven fighters,” said a security source on the scene.

Reinforcements later arrived and stopped them as they tried to cross back over the border, another security source on the scene said, triggering a gun battle. They escaped into Mali and were being pursued, he added.

 

“Land and air forces are pursuing the assailants with a view to neutralising them,” a statement from Niger’s military said, confirming the death toll.

In the initial attack one of the assailants was killed in an exchange of fire but others managed to make off with four Nigerien army vehicles, the first security source said.

Since taking over swathes of northern Mali in 2012, and then being scattered by a French-led counter-offensive the following year, Islamist militants have established themselves in lawless spaces across the desert.

They have used these areas as a springboard for a wave of attacks that threaten to destabilize West Africa.

Fighters have inflicted damage on military outposts, killed security officials and civilians, kidnapped Westerners and sometimes mounted high-profile attacks on hotels and resorts across the region, including in Burkina Faso and Ivory Coast.

Several Islamist groups and well-armed ethnic militia operate in the area along the Mali-Niger border. There have been at least 46 attacks there since early last year.

However, officials suspect many of them, including the ambush on the joint U.S.-Niger patrol, to be the work of the Islamic State in the Greater Sahara, led by Arabic-speaking north African militant Adnan Walid al-Sahrawi.

He has pledged allegiance to Islamic State militants in Iraq and Syria, although the extent of their ties are not known.

No group has yet claimed responsibility for Saturday’s attack, nor the one that killed the U.S. soldiers.
Respondin

g to its ever growing militant threat, Mali on Saturday announced a year extension of a state of emergency.

“I hope we won’t need to continue extending the state of emergency,” Defence Minister Tiena Coulibaly told reporters. “We hope that before Oct. 31, 2018, order will be restored.”

 

Leave a comment

Related Articles

Grammys Host Trevor Noah Faces Trump’s Wrath Over Epstein Joke

Donald Trump has threatened legal action against Grammy Awards host Trevor Noah...

Bonga FPSO Shutdown for Maintenance, Nigeria’s Oil Output to be Affected

Shell Nigeria Exploration and Production Company (SNEPCo) has announced the shutdown of...

Traders Count Losses as Fresh Fire Ravages Kano’s Singa Market

Barely two months after a crippling fire outbreak, Singa Market in Kano...

Tragedy in Abuja: Rising Music Star Ifunanya Dies After Snake Bite

A bright light in Nigeria’s music scene has been extinguished. Ifunanya Nwangene,...

Ademola Lookman Set to Join Atlético Madrid in €40m Deal

Nigerian forward Ademola Lookman is poised to join Atlético Madrid in a...

Ogun Gov. Abiodun to Unveil State-Owned DisCo, New World Bank-Power Projects, Mini-grids

Ogun State is gearing up for a major power boost with the...

Kano Secures ₦1trn Rail Project After Governor’s High-Profile Defection to APC

Barely 48 hours after joining the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Kano...

Emefiele’s Trial: Ex-CBN Director Admits to $2.5m ‘Gift’ Linked to $6.2m Election Logistics Fund

Bashirudeen Maishanu, a former Deputy Director of Banking Supervision at the Central...

“Selective Payouts”: Dozens of ‘Concerned’ Lawyers Demonstrate at Finance Ministry, Abuja

Lawyers representing the Concerned Lawyers for Probity and Justice protested at the...

Historic Milestone: Sarah Mullally Confirmed As First Female Archbishop of Canterbury

History was formally etched into the foundations of the Church of England...

17 Days to Go: Access Bank Lagos City Marathon Unveils Key Details

With the 2026 Access Bank Lagos City Marathon just 17 days away,...

FG to Recall Military Retirees to Secure High-Risk “Ungoverned Spaces”

The Federal Government has launched a strategic initiative to deploy military veterans...

Boardroom Titan, Business Mogul Otunba Adekunle Ojora Exits

Renowned Lagos patriarch Otunba Adekunle Ojora has died at 93. The Olori...

Dollar Slumps as Trump Signals Approval of Weak Currency

The US dollar is struggling to recover from a selloff sparked by...

FCTA Strike: NLC Defies Court Order, Tells Workers to Continue Action

The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has signaled its intent to continue industrial...

Alleged Coup: Military Can’t Try Treason Under Armed Forces Act – Frank Tietie

Abuja-based human rights lawyer Frank Tietie has cautioned that the Nigerian military...

Court Ruling: Return to Work or Face Consequences – FCT Minister Wike

Following a court-ordered end to the FCTA workers strike, Minister Nyesom Wike...

ECOWAS: Halting A Drift Towards Disintegration and Looming Civil War in Guinea-Bissau

by Paul Ejime More than 50 years after its formation, the Economic...

Total Blackout: National Grid Fails for Second Time in 96 Hours

For the second time in just four days, Nigeria’s national grid suffered...

Unions, CSOs to NAFDAC: Lift the Sachet Alcohol Ban or Face a Shutdown

Stakeholders in the food and beverage industry are escalating their opposition to...