Seven troops, 11 'terrorists' killed in Niger ahead of vote

Seven troops and 11 suspected jihadists have died in
clashes in a troubled western region of Niger ahead of elections this weekend,
the defence ministry said Thursday.
An army patrol in the Taroun area in the Tillaberi
region was ambushed early Monday morning by "heavily armed
terrorists" travelling aboard motorbikes and other vehicles, it said in a
statement, using a term that typically denotes jihadists.
The country, the poorest in the world by the
benchmark of the UN's Human Development Index, is to stage presidential and
legislative elections on Sunday.
The statement said seven troops died and two others
and a civilian were injured, while 11 attackers were killed, seven of them
after the army launched a "spontaneous riposte".
"Motorbikes and weapons were seized. Followup
operations are under way in the area," it said.
Tillaberi is located in the so-called tri-border
area, a jihadist-plagued zone where the porous borders of Niger, Mali and
Burkina Faso converge.
Travel by motorbike has been banned there since
January in a bid to prevent incursions by highly mobile jihadists riding on two
wheels.
Niger is eyeing Sunday's two-round ballot as a
historic moment, setting the country on course for its first peaceful handover
between elected leaders since independence from France 60 years ago.
President Mahamadou Issoufou, who was elected in
2011 after the country's last coup in 2010, is voluntarily stepping down after
two terms.
A landlocked state located in the heart of the
Sahel, Niger is being hammered in the southwest by jihadists from neighbouring
Mali and in the southeast by jihadists from Nigeria, the cradle of the
decade-old insurgency launched by Boko Haram.
Four thousand people in Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger
died last year from jihadist violence and ethnic bloodshed stirred by
Islamists, according to the UN.
On December 12, 34 villagers were massacred in the
southeastern region of Diffa on the eve of municipal and regional elections
that had been repeatedly delayed because of poor security.