26, October 2017
Mali: Blast kills 3 UN peacekeepers 0
Three United Nations soldiers were killed and two others wounded by an explosive device as they were escorting a convoy in northern Mali on Thursday, the peacekeeping mission in the West African nation said.
More than 80 members of the UN mission, known as MINUSMA, have been killed since 2013 in attacks by militant groups active in the country’s north and center.
The mission said in a statement that the peacekeepers’ vehicle struck the explosive device between the northern towns of Tessalit and Aguelhok around 2:30 p.m. (1430 GMT). It did not identify the nationalities of the soldiers involved.
“I condemn with the greatest energy such abject acts, whose only objective is to destabilize the country and harm the peace process underway in Mali,” said interim mission chief Koen Davidse.
The rise of extremist groups – some linked to al-Qaeda and Daesh – in the arid Sahel has alarmed Western powers like France, which has deployed thousands of troops to the region in response.
Four US Special Forces troops were killed earlier this month in neighboring Niger by fighters believed to belong to a local Daesh affiliate operating out of Mali.
(Source: Reuters)





















27, October 2017
Southern Cameroons refugees flood Nigeria 0
The UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) has begun intervention in the management of Cameroonian refugees streaming into Nigeria. More than 5,000 persons have already arrived five border communities, the Commission said, describing their situation as “worrisome”.
Following shutdown of the Nigeria-Cameroon border at Mfum/Ekok, Comptroller-General of Immigration, Mohammed Babandede, had said about 40,000 refugees were expected to migrate to Nigeria, as projected by the United Nations Refugee Agency, and that Cross River State was expected to host close to 30,000.
On Tuesday, Director General of the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA), John Inaku, led a team from the UNHCR to Utanga and Amana in Obanliku local government area, preparatory to an intervention in the crisis. He urged the host communities to sustain the tempo of their generosity. The team expressed concern over the challenge of meeting the needs of the affected and disclosed readiness to partner with Nigerian authorities to address the issue.
UNHCR official, Mr. Sam Agwa, said the condition of the refugees was disturbing, even as he commended the magnanimity of their host communities. Another staff, Mshilia Ibrahim, added that plans were underway to provide shelter for the refugees.
Eric Shu, coordinator of Rhema Care Integrated Development Centre, a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO), revealed that more than 50 women of the over 5,000 refugees in Utanga and Amana, were pregnant and needed urgent medical attention and shelter.
Source: The Guardian