UN report blames French airstrike for death of 19 civilians in Mali

Tue, Mar 30, 2021
By editor
1 MIN READ

Africa

By Paul Ejime

A UNITED Nations probe report released on Tuesday said total of 22 people died in a strike by French airplane in Bounti, central Mali on January 3.

It explained that 19 of the dead were civilian wedding guests who are “covered under the humanitarian law.”

But France, which has a 5,000-strong Barkhane forces in Mali swiftly rejected the report, saying the strike was against jihadists, and no wedding took place in the area.

The strike and similar others in the past triggered protests against French presence in Mali.

The report is based on the findings of a probe carried out by MINUSMA, the UN Mission of 15,000- personnel in Mali.

Mali suffers perennial insecurity in its North and Central regions, characterized by terrorist and separatist insurrections and ethnic violence.

Mali’s transitional government that resulted from the last military takeover of government in August 2020 is struggling to restore stability ahead of planned elections to return the politically restive former French colony to constitutional order.

 

– Mar. 30, 2021 @ 10:36 GMT /

Tags:


Canon’s strong commitment to sustainability recognised in new Quocirca Sustainability Leaders report

CANON Europe has announced that it has once again been named a leader in Quocirca’s Sustainability Leaders Report, an annual...

Read More
Namibia: Shell Write Down Merely a Speed Bump, not a Road Block

ENERGY major Shell has announced that oil discovered offshore Namibia in Petroleum Exploration License, PEL, 39 cannot be currently confirmed...

Read More
Ministry of Mines and Energy responds to Shell’s Orange Basin Write-Down

THE Ministry of Mines and Energy of the Republic of Namibia announces that multinational oil and gas company Shell will...

Read More