Al Qaeda claimed responsibility for two attacks that killed at least two firefighters and three civilians on Monday near Bamako, in a statement it said it verified with the SITE think tank, which routinely monitors jihadist activity in Internet.
The jihadists of the Organization for the Support of Islam and Muslims (WIM), which is close to al-Qaeda, claimed responsibility for “two simultaneous attacks against firefighting facilities and an environmental and forest protection unit (…) near the capital Bamako”, according to the announcement.
The attacks took place in the communities of Markakougo and Kasela, on the Bamako-Ségou axis, in southeastern Mali, where such actions are rare.
Al Qaeda gave no account of the attacks. The Ministry of Security and Civil Protection spoke yesterday Tuesday about five dead, two firefighters and three civilians, in the attack in Markakougo.
Mali, a landlocked Sahel country, has been fighting jihadists for more than a decade. The violence has spread to neighboring states, Niger and Burkina Faso.
The military junta, in power in Mali since 2020, has brought in Russians, whom it presents as military trainers, to help it fight the jihadists.
Western governments, however, complain that the trainers Bamako is talking about are actually mercenaries of the private military company Wagner, which is said to have close ties to the Kremlin.
RES-EMP
Read the News today and get the latest news.
Follow Skai.gr on Google News and be the first to know all the news.
With a wealth of experience honed over 4+ years in journalism, I bring a seasoned voice to the world of news. Currently, I work as a freelance writer and editor, always seeking new opportunities to tell compelling stories in the field of world news.