A fresh wave of attacks by jihadist fighters in central Mali have killed dozens of people in the West African country.
Friday’s attacks were claimed by the Al-Qaeda-linked Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims (JNIM), who had already killed no fewer than 30 people in attacks on villages on Wednesday.
One local official said the latest attacks by the armed groups had brought the toll to more than 70 in recent days.
Another local official put the death toll at 80.
“Our hearts are bleeding,” one local youth leader said, accusing nearby army detachments of doing nothing to help, despite multiple calls.
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One security source described the situation in the region as “worrying”.
“JNIM is targeting villages that refused to sign local agreements,” the source told AFP.
The latest attacks come after JNIM and the Tuareg-dominated Azawad Liberation Front (FLA) carried out an unprecedented assaultagainst the ruling junta in Mali last month.
Since then, Mali’s security situation has become critical, with several areas in the north now controlled by armed groups.
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