The Guardian (USA)

Russian mercenarie­s and Mali army accused of killing 300 civilians

- Emmanuel Akinwotu in Lagos

Suspected Russian mercenarie­s participat­ed in an operation with Mali’s army in March in which about 300 civilian men were allegedly executed over five days, Human Rights Watch (HRW) says.

Eyewitness­es and local community leaders said hundreds of men were rounded up and killed in small groups during the anti-jihadist operation on 23 March in the central town of Moura. The rural town of about 10,000 inhabitant­s is in the Mopti region, a hotspot of jihadist activity that has intensifie­d and spread to neighbouri­ng countries in the Sahel region.

Local security sources told HRW that more than 100 Russian-speaking men were allegedly involved in the operation, which HRW described as the worst single atrocity reported in Mali’s decade-long armed conflict. Witnesses spoke of white soldiers talking in an unfamiliar foreign language they believed to be Russian.

Mali’s army has long been accused of rights abuses during counterins­urgency operations. A Mali military spokespers­on did not immediatel­y respond to a request by Reuters for comment on the HRW report.

“Abuses by armed Islamist groups is no justificat­ion at all for the military’s deliberate slaughter of people in custody,” said Corinne Dufka, Sahel director at Human Rights Watch. “The Malian government is responsibl­e for this atrocity, the worst in Mali in a decade, whether carried about by Malian forces or associated foreign soldiers.”

After the reports of alleged atrocities in Moura, Mali’s army said last week that from 23-31 March it killed 203 Islamist militants and detained a further 51 following intelligen­ce reports about a meeting between rebel groups. It added that it would investigat­e any allegation­s of rights abuses.

Horrific accounts of alleged abuses by Malian forces and suspected Russian mercenarie­s have emerged from the town. On 27 March, witnesses said that Malian soldiers arrived by helicopter near Moura’s animal market and exchanged gunfire with jihadists. Helicopter­s blocked exits from the area as traders and civilians tried to escape.

The witnesses said soldiers patrolled the town, executing several unarmed men trying to flee and detaining hundreds more. The witnesses said groups of up to 10 men at a time, most from the pastoralis­t Fulani (also known as Peuhl) ethnic group, were killed.

One trader said he was drinking tea with his two brothers while waiting for the market to start when he heard shooting. “Seven Russians approached, gesturing for us to get up. There were no Malian soldiers with them. They searched us and the house, then took us east of the village, near the river, where we found another 100 men,” he told HRW. “Another group of Russians pointed at my brothers and another man. I thought they were going for interrogat­ion. They took them several metres away and executed them, point blank.”

Mali, an impoverish­ed country of nearly 21 million people, is governed by a junta that seized power in a coup in August 2020, promising to restore civilian rule. The country is under sanctions from the west Africa bloc Ecowas for ignoring an earlier commitment to hold elections in February this year.

Swathes of Mali lie outside government control, owing to a brutal jihadist conflict that started in 2012 and has spread to neighbouri­ng Burkina Faso and Niger.

Germany’s foreign ministry urged Mali to hold an independen­t investigat­ion into the reports of civilian deaths. “Mali’s general staff mentioned no civilian victims in its report of the operation,” the German Foreign Office said. “That is contradict­ed by possible witness statements that mention targeted killing of civilians.”

There has been a sharp rise in killings of civilians and terror suspects in Mali since late December, both by jihadist groups linked to al-Qaida and the Islamic State, and by Malian security forces. HRW said at least 107 civilians have been killed, and that 71 of the deaths could be linked to Malianalig­ned forces.

Mali’s military leadership has forged closer links with Russia after its relations soured with the west – in particular with France, its former ally and colonial-era ruler, which has committed to scaling down its forces in the Sahel.

The Malian government is battling the insurgency with the help of private military contractor­s from Russia’s Wagner group. Mali and Russia have previously said they are not mercenarie­s but trainers helping local troops with equipment bought from Russia.

Wagner, establishe­d in 2014 to support pro-Russian separatist­s in eastern Ukraine, is allegedly funded by Yevgeny Prigozhin, a powerful businessma­n closely linked to Vladimir Putin who has faced western sanctions. Prigozhin and Moscow have denied any knowledge of Wagner and, officially, private military companies are illegal in Russia. On paper the firm does not exist, with no company registrati­on, tax returns or organisati­onal chart to be found.

 ?? Operations. Photograph: Joerg Boethling/Alamy ?? A file photograph of a Malian soldier on patrol in eastern Mali. The army has long been accused of rights abuses during counterins­urgency
Operations. Photograph: Joerg Boethling/Alamy A file photograph of a Malian soldier on patrol in eastern Mali. The army has long been accused of rights abuses during counterins­urgency

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