Summary:
- An armed group attacked a wedding ceremony in central Mali on Monday, killing at least 21 people, residents and local officials said on Wednesday.
An armed group attacked a wedding ceremony in central Mali on Monday, killing at least 21 people, residents and local officials said on Wednesday.
The attack happened in the village of Djiguibombo, not far from the town of Bandiagara, in the center of the country. One local official pointed the finger at jihadists.
The West African nation’s military rulers have been struggling to combat growing violence by extremists.
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Guests massacred, homes looted
The assailants rode on motorcycles into the village on Monday evening and crashed the wedding celebrations, the President of the local youth group, Bakary Guindo said.
“Most of the victims had their throats slit,” Guindo added, others were shot dead. A youth representative said that the attack began before nightfall and “lasted around three hours,” adding that more than half were “young people.”
Ginna Dogon, an organization that represents the Dogon ethnic group, said the attackers looted people’s houses, set fire to a health center and stole livestock and supplies.
It is “the latest tragedy in a dark series that the Dogon country has been going through for several years, with daily attacks on villages, farmers in the fields, killings and kidnappings,” the group said.
So far, no group has claimed responsibility for the attack. However, it bears similarities to previous attacks by the al-Qaida-linked JNIM extremist group, which has targeted the region multiple times before.
Communities across central and northern Mali have faced instability and violence since groups affiliated with al-Qaida and so-called “Islamic State” began launching attacks in 2012.
The security situation in the country has deteriorated significantly, especially since the military junta, which took power in 2020, cut its cooperation with France. French troops had been involved in anti-insurgency operations in its former colony.
Following France’s expulsion, extremist groups have regained ground. Thousands have been killed in the violence and hundreds of thousands have been displaced.
In the almost four years since military rulers seized power in Mali, the government has struggled to contain the violence.