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Niger says 17 soldiers killed in ambush near Burkina Faso border

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NIAMEY: Niger’s junta on Wednesday said 17 of its soldiers were killed in an ambush by insurgents, the deadliest attack since a July 26 coup whose leaders have cited persistent insecurity as a justification for deposing the civilian government.


The ambush took place on Tuesday about 60 km from the capital Niamey, in a southwestern area that borders Burkina Faso, the defence ministry said, adding that 100 attackers it referred to as “terrorists” were killed.


“The swift reaction of the soldiers and the air-land response at the scene of the skirmish enabled the enemy to be dealt with,” the ministry said.


Niger, like other countries in West Africa’s Sahel region, has been struggling for years to contain an insurgency by groups linked to al Qaeda and IS that have killed thousands, forced millions to flee their homes and caused food shortages. The perceived inability of civilian governments to overcome the problem has been one of the factors in a string of coups in the region, although in the case of Niger the main drivers of the army takeover were internal politics.


Members of the presidential guard, headed by General Abdourahmane Tiani, deposed President Mohamed Bazoum and are still detaining him, defying pressure from the United Nations, West African bloc ECOWAS and Western powers to reinstate him. While Tiani said the takeover was necessary to quell the insurgency, analysts say attacks, though still frequent, had been falling under Bazoum.


Niger hosts US, French, German and Italian troops as part of international efforts to combat the insurgency, under agreements with the now deposed civilian government.


The future of those foreign contingents is unclear, with the junta using vitriolic anti-French rhetoric and resisting pressure from ECOWAS, the UN and Western countries to negotiate a way out of the current situation.


Niger has extra strategic importance to global powers due to its uranium and oil deposits. — Reuters


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