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AFRICA NEWS
Three Mali soldiers killed in jihadist attack
by Staff Writers
Bamako (AFP) June 27, 2015


Five civilians and three soldiers killed in DR Congo rebel raid
Mayoyao, Philippines (AFP) June 27, 2015 - Five civilians and three soldiers were killed in an attack by rebels on a Congolese army camp near Beni in the restive east of the country.

An AFP photographer saw the bodies of the victims as well as those of eight alleged guerilla fighters killed by the army after the raid on Friday at May-Moya in North Kivu province.

The killings are the latest blamed on Ugandan rebels of the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF), who are accused of murdering around 400 people in nine months of massacres in and around the major eastern trading hub of Beni.

The mainly Muslim rebels attacked the military camp with automatic weapons before being driven back after several hours of fighting, a senior army officer at the scene told AFP.

Some 20 homes nearby were also burned down during the raid, the photographer reported.

Most of the ADF's victims have been hacked to death with machetes in atrocities that prompted a joint operation by the Congolese army and UN troops in December to root out the rebels, who used the then war-torn country as a base to launch an insurgency in neighbouring Uganda against President Yoweri Museveni in the mid-1990s.

The local population has accused the government of President Joseph Kabila of failing to protect them and angry street protests in Beni have often turned violent.

The region's Catholic bishops have also been critical of Kinshasa, saying that "security, peace and territorial integrity do not seem to be priorities for the authorities."

Three Malian soldiers died Saturday in a jihadist attack on the southwestern town of Nara, on the Mauritania border, with several Islamist fighters also killed, officials said.

"We deplore the death of three soldiers" in the early morning attack, the Mali government said in a statement, which added that nine of the assailants were also killed as troops responded.

A police source, as well as many local residents, blamed the attack on Islamist gunmen for the attack in the town 380 kilometres (240 miles) north of the capital Bamako.

"At least four jihadists were killed by the army. They wore long beards. Drugs were found in the pocket of one of the jihadists," the source added.

Some of the attackers managed to flee the scene.

A local Nara official said he saw the bodies of two jihadists on the street.

"The market and the shops are closed. Everyone is scared," he added.

"Everyone hid in their homes. The attackers came out of the forest with many vehicles. They were heavily armed," an official said on local radio.

The country descended into chaos in 2012 when an insurgency by Tuareg rebels led to a coup in the capital Bamako. Jihadists linked to Al-Qaeda then overpowered the Tuareg to seize control of the north.

A French-led military operation launched in January 2013 drove the extremists out of the region's towns and cities.

But the country remains deeply divided, with the Tuareg and Arab populations of the north accusing sub-Saharan ethnic groups in the more prosperous south of marginalising them.

Tuareg rebels and Islamist militants remain active throughout the north, a vast area the size of France, but attacks outside of the region are rare.


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