Gunmen killed 10
civilians in an attack on the village of Gaberi in northern Mali, army
spokesman Souleymane Maiga said on Sunday, a day after a siege by suspected
Islamist gunmen northeast of the capital in which at least 12 died.
The siege was the latest
in what appears to be a campaign against Malian soldiers and United Nations
personnel by remnants of an insurgency linked to al Qaeda and newly formed
Islamist militant groups.
Four U.N. personnel were
freed in the pre-dawn raid that ended the 24-hour siege at a hotel in Sevare,
but three to five U.N. workers were killed.
Maiga said it was too
soon to know if the siege was connected to the village attack in which one
gunman also died.
A 2013 French-led
military operation drove back Islamist fighters, who had taken advantage of an
ethnic Tuareg rebellion and a military coup to seize territory in the north a
year earlier.
The United Nations has
managed to broker a tenuous peace agreement between the government and Tuareg
separatists, but Islamist fighters left out of the negotiations have mounted an
insurgency.
No comments:
Post a Comment