Mine kills 16 civilians in northern Mali

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Senegalese soldiers of the UN peacekeeping mission in Mali MINUSMA (United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilisation Mission in Mali) patrol in the streets of Gao, on July 24, 2019, as an armoured vehicle of the FAMA (Mali Armed Forces) drives nearby, a day after suicide bombers in a vehicle painted with UN markings injured one French, several Estonian troops and two Malian civilians in an attack on an international peace-keeping base in Mali. - Malian authorities have struggled to improve security since France intervened in 2013 to drive back Islamic insurgents in the north. Around 4,000 French troops are deployed under Operation Barkhane alongside the MINUSMA peacekeeping force of around 15,000 soldiers and police. (Photo by Souleymane Ag Anara / AFP)

BAMAKO, May 21, 2021 (BSS/AFP) – Sixteen civilians were killed near Gao in northern Mali when their vehicle hit a mine, hospital sources said Thursday.

Two hospital sources in the north’s largest city confirmed the toll from the Wednesday blast to AFP, the latest civilian deaths in a region plagued by a years-long jihadist insurgency.

“Three more wounded people are in the hospital in Gao,” one of the sources said, adding that the 16 dead had been buried in the city on Thursday.

“The wounded said that the vehicle was on its way to a fair in the village of Ntillit, around 80 kilometres (50 miles) from Gao,” the second hospital source said.

An improvised explosive device killed two civilians on May 8 near Tessalit in northern Mali, the day after three soldiers were also killed when a bomb blast hit their convoy near Hombori in the country’s centre.

Mali’s jihadist insurgency began in 2012, spreading across the north and centre of the country and into neighbouring Burkina Faso and Niger.

Jihadist attacks, interethnic violence and other unrest have killed thousands and forced hundreds of thousands more to flee, persisting in the face of interventions by UN, African and French troops.

UN figures showed that last year 76 people were killed and 287 wounded by mines and improvised explosives in Mali, around half of them civilians, with the toll continuing to mount this year.