Niger: New presidential measures to combat terrorism
On Saturday, November 6, Niger’s
Ministry of Defense announced the killing of 11 soldiers and the loss of nine
others as a result of a bloody terrorist attack on an army post in the west of the
country.
A statement issued by the ministry
said that the attack killed 11 soldiers and wounded one soldier, adding that
air and ground reinforcements sent to the area continue to comb the area.
The statement indicated that the
soldiers targeted in the attack had been deployed in the area to ensure the
safety of thousands of villagers who returned to their homes after massacres of
dozens of civilians at the hands of terrorists.
Rely on the
army
Niger is facing terrorist
insurgencies on its western border with Mali and on its southeastern border
with Nigeria, where al-Qaeda affiliates are active in the Maghreb, in addition
to ISIS and Boko Haram.
Nigerien President Mohamed Bazoum
asked his compatriots during a Saturday visit to the western city to rely on
the army to fight the terrorist threat.
“I would like you to rely on the
Nigerien army. Its job is to ensure your safety,” he told about a thousand
people across from the Bani-Bangou city headquarters.
“I understand that you are not
satisfied with our return and our performance. If you think that you can
guarantee your defense, that is legitimate, but who should guarantee your
security is the country that you should rely on,” he added.
The head of state was referring to
the self-defense committees that were formed recently in the region to ensure
the security of farmers, who are constantly targeted by armed men in their
fields.
Local sources reported that one of
those committees headed by a member of the Bani-Bango city council was
subjected to the bloody ambush on Tuesday, and among the 84 members of the
vigilance committee, 69 were killed, including the city's mayor.
“We have deployed forces, but the
area is huge and the needs are many. Terrorists use motorbikes, they are fast
and cowardly and come to isolated villages. Above all, we must avoid that this
leads to a deterioration of the relationship between the local communities. We
are brothers,” the president said.
National
mourning
The Nigerien government had declared
48 hours of national mourning, starting Friday, after 69 villagers from the
Self-Defense Force were killed in an attack in the Tillaberi region in the west
near the border with Mali.
The Tahoua region near Tillaberi
witnessed the killing of 141 people inMarch at the hands of terrorists. Tillaberi
is a vast and unstable region, with an area of about 100,000 square kilometers.
Since 2017, it has been the scene of bloody attacks by terrorist groups linked
to al-Qaeda and ISIS.
For its part, the French Center for
Strategic and International Studies stated in a study that security doubts in
the region caused the continuous escalation of conflicts and political
protests, as well as the continuation of military coups against the ruling
regime, which led to undermining the pillars of internal security and enhancing
citizens’ sense of uncertainty and mistrust in the ability of the ruling
security forces and their allies to extend their security authority.
The center added that the
intervention of foreign forces has become an additional justification for
terrorist groups by targeting public places or places of passage for these
forces, which causes the death of civilians. The leaders of terrorist groups
active in the Sahel justify their terrorist operations as a “response to the
presence of Western military forces in the Sahel region,” stressing that
without the presence of these forces, “they would not have resorted to
hostilities.”