The Borneo Post

Niger air strike kills 14 civilians mistaken for jihadists

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NIAMEY: An air strike by Niger’s army has killed 14 displaced people who were mistaken for jihadists in the restive southeast where Boko Haram Islamists have staged regular attacks, regional officials said Thursday.

The victims were farmers who had fled the area around the village of Abadam on the Nigerian border due to the raging insurgency.

They were killed in an air strike Wednesday as they returned to check on their crops, officials said.

Abadam lies within an evacuated no-go zone which is only accessible with prior authorisat­ion and officials said military personnel assumed they must have been Boko Haram fighters, given their location.

“There have unfortunat­ely been 14 deaths – two Nigeriens and 12 Nigerians,” Yahaya Godi, secretary general of the Diffa regional authority, told local radio in the capital Niamey.

“Abadam is in a no- entry zone and so all movements inside are regarded as those of Boko Haram,” he said.

“It was in order to avoid attacks that the plane did not hesitate with its bombardmen­ts. That’s why there was this error. The people violated the ban, they left Diffa in order to do agricultur­al work without informing the people they were supposed to.”

The plane ‘could not distinguis­h’ between Boko Haram and civilians, he said. Military authoritie­s in Diffa were not immediatel­y reachable for comment.

Diffa has suffered a string of Boko Haram attacks since 2015 against both military targets and civilians as the insurgency spilled across national borders.

A local journalist, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the army had been ‘on edge’ after two recent attacks in the local area.

News of the civilian deaths came just two days after Diffa authoritie­s said Boko Haram had kidnapped 37 children and slit the throats of nine other people in the village of Ngalewa.

And a week ago two women detonated suicide bombs in the nearby village of Kabalewa, killing two people.

Niger authoritie­s evacuated civilians from the border zone in May 2015 as a four-nation military force – made up of troops from Niger, Nigeria, Chad and Cameroon – began a ground and aerial offensive against Boko Haram in the Lake Chad region.

The evacuation was unpopular with many villagers who were forced into camps for displaced people. Some have been returning to tend to their crops, despite the entry ban. – AFP

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