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Nigeria reinstates 3,000 soldiers dismissed over Boko Haram war
by Staff Writers
Abuja (AFP) Sept 3, 2015


Malian soldier killed in ambush on troops: military
Bamako (AFP) Sept 3, 2015 - Militants killed one soldier and wounded seven more in the second deadly ambush on Malian troops in as many days, the army and the government said on Thursday.

A detachment came under fire around 6:00 pm (1800 GMT) on Wednesday near the town of Diafarabe, in the central region of Mopti, according to a statement from the military, which added that one soldier was still missing.

The statement did not say who was behind the attack but described it as a "terrorist act".

The government condemned the bloodshed and said in a statement it encouraged troops to continue to "fight tirelessly against terrorism" and to protect Malians and their property.

The attack on Wednesday came the day after two Malian soldiers were killed in a pre-dawn "heavy arms" attack against an army checkpoint outside Timbuktu in northern Mali, according to the defence ministry and a UN source told AFP.

The violence follows a deadly ambush on August 3, also in the Timbuktu region, when 10 soldiers were killed at their camp at Gourma-Rharous by what was believed to be jihadist fighters linked to Islamist group Ansar Dine.

Jihadist groups linked to Al-Qaeda seized control of Mali's vast arid north from March 2012 until January 2013 when they were pushed back by forces from France, the country's former colonial ruler.

But parts of the remote north remain out of the control of the army or of the UN military mission as the country struggles to restore peace.

There were hopes of a return to stability in May when northern-based loyalist militias signed a peace deal with Tuareg rebels in the area, but the security situation remains fragile.

The Nigerian army said Thursday it had reinstated some 3,000 soldiers who were dismissed for alleged indiscipline in the battle against Boko Haram insurgents in the northeast.

Army spokesman Colonel Sani Usman told reporters in Abuja that a total of 5,000 cases were reviewed, out of which 3,032 soldiers were pardoned and recalled.

"The reinstated soldiers have shown their total readiness to be re-launched into the theatre to combat insurgency and have now commenced re-training exercise," he said.

Usman said the army authorities had upheld the sentences of those "with criminal cases", without explaining the nature of the crimes.

He said a judicial process would however determine the fate of 66 soldiers sentenced to death for mutiny and abandoning the war front.

"The condemned soldiers have already filed for appeal. So it is in the judicial process and it is on," he said.

Nigerian troops based in the northeast have at times defied orders to battle Boko Haram Islamists, citing a lack of adequate weapons and other essential equipment.

Last year, soldiers based in the northeastern city of Maiduguri set up a protest camp after being ordered to deploy to a remote part of the region to fight Boko Haram.

Wives of soldiers launched a separate protest outside a barracks, claiming their husbands were being used as cannon fodder and were being sent to battle insurgents who had vastly superior weapons.

A military court last December sentenced 54 soldiers to death for refusing to deploy and take on Boko Haram in the northeast.

Twelve received the same sentence in September last year for mutiny after shots were fired at their commanding officer.


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