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Monday, November 18, 2024  
15 Jumada Al-Awwal 1446  

Mali river boat, base attacks kill 64

Tensions revived after the UN mission in Mali handed over two bases to armed forces
Niger soldiers patrol in the desert of Iferouane on February 12, 2020 - AFP
Niger soldiers patrol in the desert of Iferouane on February 12, 2020 - AFP

Attacks on an army base and a passenger boat on the Niger River in northern Mali on Thursday killed 64 people, a Malian official said.

The two separate attacks targeted the Timbuktu boat on the Niger river and an army position at Bamba, in the northern Gao region with “a provisional toll of 49 civilians and 15 soldiers killed”, according to a government statement.

It did not specify how many died in each assault, but the assaults were “claimed” by a group affiliated to Al-Qaeda.

Earlier the Malian army said on social media that the boat was attacked around 1100 GMT by “armed terrorist groups”.

The vessel, plying an established route between cities along the river, was targeted by “at least three rockets” which aimed at its engines, the operator Comanav said separately.

The vessel was immobilised on the river and the army is evacuating passengers, a Comanav official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Images on social media showed a cloud of black smoke rising above the river. The incident took place in a remote area and the images could not be verified independently.

Niger is a vital transport link in a region where road infrastructure is poor and railways absent.

The impoverished state has been struggling with insecurity since 2012 when a revolt led by ethnic Tuaregs erupted in the troubled north.

In northern Mali, the regional rebellion was formally ended by a peace agreement signed between the rebels and the Malian government in 2015.

However, the fragile deal came under strain after the civilian government was toppled in 2020 and replaced by a junta.

Tensions in the region have revived in recent weeks after the UN peacekeeping mission in Mali, which has been told to leave by year’s end, handed over two bases near Timbuktu to the armed forces.

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