95 dead in latest massacre to hit central Mali

Unknown assailants killed at least 95 people in an
ethnic Dogon village overnight in the latest massacre to destabilize central
Mali, a government official said Monday.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for
the attack, though tensions have been high since an ethnic Dogon militia was
accused of carrying out a larger massacre in an ethnic Peuhl village in March.
Youssouf Toloba, who leads the Dogon militia known
as Dan Na Ambassagou, has denied that his fighters carried out the March
bloodshed that left at least 157 people dead. Some Peuhl leaders, however, have
vowed to carry out reprisal attacks.
Amadou Sangho, spokesman for the Interior Security
ministry, said another 19 people were missing after the Dogon village of Sobane
was attacked around 3 a.m. on Monday. The village is in the commune of Sangha,
the heart of the Dogon militia blamed for the March attack that has been the
deadliest so far.
The latest attackers are suspected “terrorists,”
Mali’s government said in a statement later Monday. “This carnage” also left
homes burned and animals killed, the statement said. Security reinforcements
were deployed to track the perpetrators, it said.
Intercommunal violence has risen steadily in central
Mali over the last several years, exacerbated by the presence of Islamic
extremists who have moved south from their strongholds in the arid north.
The Peuhl are accused of working alongside jihadists
from the Islamic State of Greater Sahara organization to attack Dogon villages
and prevent residents from cultivating their land.
The Peuhl in turn have alleged that the Dogons are
collaborating with Mali’s military though there is no conclusive sign of state
support.
Human Rights Watch has said the Dan Na Ambassagou
militia has been implicated in scores of deadly attacks over the past year and
Mali’s president has vowed to eliminate it.
Mali’s government must address the arming of ethnic
self-defense groups and the proliferation of arms in central Mali or “there is
a high risk of further escalation that could lead to the commission of atrocity
crimes,” the United Nations secretary-general said in his latest report on Mali
late last month.
The unrest in central Mali has displaced some 60,000
people, Secretary-General Antonio Guterres wrote, adding that he was “appalled”
by the surge in violence and its effect on civilians.