2025 is the year when Biya’s long rule finally lost its last convincing justification
Young Cameroonians: Build social capital to succeed
Eulogy for HRH Nfor Professor Teddy Ako of Ossing
Will Fr. Paul Verdzekov recognize the refurbished and rededicated Cathedral in Bamenda were he to return today?
Cameroon apparently under a de facto federalism
4 Anglophone detainees killed in Yaounde
Chantal Biya says she will return to Cameroon if General Ivo Yenwo, Martin Belinga Eboutou and Ferdinand Ngoh Ngoh are sacked
The Anglophone Problem – When Facts don’t Lie
Anglophone Nationalism: Barrister Eyambe says “hidden plans are at work”
Largest wave of arrest by BIR in Bamenda
23, January 2020
Mali: At least six soldiers killed in overnight ambush 0
At least six soldiers have been killed and several wounded in an overnight attack in central Mali, the army says, in fresh violence in the war-torn West African state.
The troops came under fire late Wednesday from “unidentified armed men” in Dioungani, an area in central Mali’s volatile Mopti region near the border with Burkina Faso, the army said on Twitter.
A security official who declined to be named said that, in an assault lasting several hours, the attackers overwhelmed the soldiers’ position before reinforcements took it back.
Local authorities and inhabitants have blamed the attack on militants.
The army gave a “provisional toll” of six dead and several wounded, without giving further details.
The security official, however, said seven soldiers had been killed.
Mali has been struggling to contain a militant insurgency that erupted in the north in 2012 and has claimed thousands of military and civilian lives since.
Despite some 4,500 French troops in the Sahel region, plus a 13,000-strong UN peacekeeping force in Mali, the conflict has engulfed the center of the country and spread to neighboring Burkina Faso and Niger.
Local Malian troops are frequently attacked. On Tuesday, two soldiers were killed in the Mopti region when their convoy hit a roadside bomb.
On January 13, French President Emmanuel Macron and the leaders of Sahel states agreed to focus their military efforts on the border region between Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger.
(Source: AFP)