Terrorist Attack Kills 56 Civilians in Niger

Published January 3rd, 2021 - 06:45 GMT
A Nigerien soldier stands guard as Niger's outgoing president Mahamadou Issoufou arrives at a polling station in Niamey on December 27, 2020 during Niger's presidential and legislative elections. Voters in the Sahel state of Niger go to the polls on December 27, 2020 for an election that could seal the country's first-ever peaceful handover between elected presidents, despite a bloody jihadist insurgency. Issouf SANOGO / AFP
A Nigerien soldier stands guard as Niger's outgoing president Mahamadou Issoufou arrives at a polling station in Niamey on December 27, 2020 during Niger's presidential and legislative elections. Voters in the Sahel state of Niger go to the polls on December 27, 2020 for an election that could seal the country's first-ever peaceful handover between elected presidents, despite a bloody jihadist insurgency. Issouf SANOGO / AFP
Highlights
Attack took place near Malian border

At least 56 civilians were killed Saturday after terrorists attacked two villages in southwestern Niger, a government official said.

The incident, that also left 20 injured occurred in Tchombangou and Zaroumdareye villages near the Malian border, according to the Interior Minister Alkache Alhada.

He said soldiers have been dispatched to the area.

A landlocked country in Africa's Sahel region, Niger faces complex security and humanitarian challenges. It hosts about 230,000 refugees and 250,000 internally displaced persons, according to the UN.

Boko Haram has been terrorizing the country for several years, and killed at least 27 people in the Diffa region last month.


This article has been adapted from its original source.

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