Bangkok Post

French air strike kills jihadists

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France said on Tuesday it had killed dozens of jihadists in a weekend air strike in central Mali, while several villagers and a local group said up to 20 wedding guests were killed by fire from a helicopter.

Social media has been buzzing with rumours since Sunday about events in Bounti, and villagers there said that a wedding party was attacked by an unidentifi­ed helicopter.

Separately, French military headquarte­rs said fighter jets had “neutralise­d” dozens of jihadists in central Mali after the group had been tracked for several days.

“The reports relating to a wedding do not match the observatio­ns that were made,” an army spokesman said.

With no early statements from French or Malian officials, rumours filled the gap.

Confirmati­on of reports is difficult in a remote area where many jihadists are thought to operate.

Offensive aerial operations in Mali are mainly conducted by the Malian military or by the French anti-jihadist force Barkhane.

Villagers in Bounti said a lone helicopter opened fire in broad daylight, sowing panic among a crowd gathered for a wedding.

“It was run for your lives,” said Ahmadou Ghana, who said 19 people died, including two of his brothers, and several other villagers were seriously wounded.

“We were surprised by the intensity of the strike,” said another villager, Mady Dicko, adding: “The helicopter was flying very low.”

On Sunday, Tabital Pulakuu, an associatio­n that promotes the culture of Mali’s Fulani ethnic group, reported an “air strike that claimed the lives of at least 20 civilians” during a wedding.

A French military source who was familiar with Sunday’s operation Said: “There can’t be any doubts or ambiguity, there was no wedding.

“This was a strike that was carried out after a particular­ly strict, multi-party process on a fully identified armed terrorist group, after collating informatio­n, intentions, posture, in a studied area,” the source said.

It remains unclear, however, whether the French military and the Bounti villagers were referring to the same event.

A spokespers­on for the 13,000-strong United Nations’ peacekeepi­ng force in Mali, known as Minusma, said the force was “not involved” in the events in Bounti.

The village lies in the jihadist-infested Mopti region, about 600 kilometres from the capital Bamako.

The region is the epicentre of a deadly Islamist offensive that began in northern Mali in 2012 and then advanced into neighbouri­ng Burkina Faso and Niger, inflaming ethnic tensions along the way.

Thousands of soldiers and civilians have died in the conflict to date and hundreds of thousands of people have had to flee their homes.

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