Eyewitnesses speak of “a phalanx of heavily armed terrorists riding in several vehicles and dozens of motorcycles”
Eleven soldiers have been killed and nine are reported missing in a jihadist attack on an army post in Danie, western Niger, in an area where 69 civilians were killed in an ambush last week, the government said.
The attack by “a phalanx of heavily armed terrorists riding in several vehicles and dozens of motorcycles” killed eleven soldiers and wounded one, according to a Defense Ministry statement read on state television.
“After fierce fighting, the enemy phalanx was forced to retreat, taking with it its dead and wounded,” the statement said, adding that “air and ground reinforcements sent continue to sweep the area.”
The targeted soldiers were deployed to secure the safety of thousands of villagers who had returned to their communities after the massacre of dozens of civilians by alleged jihadists.
The Nigerian government has declared two days of national mourning since 48 hours after the massacre of 69 villagers, members of the self-defense militia, in an attack in Tilabery, Nigeria’s “tri-national border” area with Burkina Faso and Mali.
In this area since the beginning of the year, so-called jihadists have escalated deadly attacks on civilians.
According to a former mayor of the area, villagers had recently formed self-defense committees to protect farmers who are a frequent target of militants.
In the Tahua area near Tilamberi, 141 people were slaughtered in March by suspected jihadists in several small villages and camps.
This vast and volatile 100,000-square-kilometer area is located in the “tri-national border” area of Niger with Burkina Faso and Mali, the scene of recent bloody attacks by jihadist groups swearing allegiance to either Al Qaeda or Islamic State (IS). .
During a visit to the region in September, President Mohamed Bazoum said that “the enemy is infiltrating among an unarmed innocent civilian population” and “is involved in widespread massacres.”