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Suicide bomber kills four Malian soldiers
by Staff Writers
Bamako (AFP) Jan 28, 2018


US military probes purported Niger ambush video
Washington (AFP) Jan 26, 2018 - The US military has opened an investigation after images surfaced online this week that appear to have been taken from the helmet camera of one of the US soldiers killed in an ambush in Niger.

Grainy photographs posted and circulated on Twitter purportedly show a soldier in US uniform lying on the dry-earthen ground, a US flag patch on his chest.

The image looks like it was recorded from another soldier's helmet camera. The exact provenance of the photos is murky, but the original Twitter account to post the pictures said they had been collected by an Islamic State affiliate.

"I'm aware of the report, and we have not confirmed the authenticity of that," Pentagon spokeswoman Dana White said Thursday.

One tweet, now deleted, claimed there was an associated video.

The US military's Africa command said it was aware of the Twitter postings purporting to show the October 4 ambush in Tongo Tongo, Niger.

"We are reviewing the post and determining the veracity of the tweet and the assertions that there is an associated video," AFRICOM said in a statement.

The ambush occurred as a unit of 12 American special forces soldiers and 30 Nigerien troops returned from the village near the border with Mali.

They were attacked by a group of some 50 fighters affiliated with IS and equipped with small arms, grenades and trucks mounted with guns.

Four American soldiers were killed along with at least five Nigerien troops. The body of one US soldier, Sergeant La David Johnson, was not recovered until the following day.

Questions remain about what intelligence failures may have occurred that allowed such a large attack, but the Pentagon has remained tight-lipped about the circumstances surrounding the ambush as well as the nature of the mission while it conducts a probe.

US troops frequently wear cameras while out on missions, sometimes even using their own GoPro-style devices.

A suicide bomber killed four Malian soldiers on Sunday, the army said, in the second deadly attack this weekend in the country's troubled north.

Mali's deteriorating security situation is of growing concern as Al-Qaeda-linked groups mount increasingly ferocious attacks on domestic and foreign forces.

"A terrorist suicide bomber was destroyed this morning, Sunday, January 28, 2018, in Menaka as he attempted to blow himself up on the approach to an army and national guard post," a statement by the armed forces posted on social media said.

"Unfortunately during this operation, four armed forces personnel lost their lives," it added.

A Malian military source told AFP earlier there was more than one attacker, blaming jihadists, adding that the armed forces were now "in control of the situation". A local official told AFP rockets were launched at the site.

Meanwhile French helicopters were circling the area, the sources said.

The attack comes the day after 14 soldiers were killed and 18 wounded when suspected jihadists seized control of their camp in Soumpi, near Timbuktu in northern Mali and about 800 kilometres (500 miles) east of Menaka.

And on Thursday 26 civilians including mothers and infants were killed when their vehicle ran over a landmine in Boni, central Mali, leading President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita to cancel plans to attend an African Union summit in order to visit the area.

Keita told victims' families: "All of Mali was in mourning, all of Mali is appalled" over the high civilian death toll.

"Everyone knows what we are going through... Every day we do what we can," he added.

Islamist extremists linked to Al-Qaeda took control of the desert north of the former French colony in early 2012, but were largely driven out in an ongoing French-led military operation launched in January 2013.

In June 2015, Mali's government signed a peace agreement with coalitions of non-jihadist armed groups. But Islamist insurgents remain active, and large tracts of the country are lawless.

AFRICA NEWS
S.Africa in 'new era', likely next president tells Davos
Davos, Switzerland (AFP) Jan 25, 2018
South Africa's likely next president promised pro-business reforms and tough justice for those guilty of state corruption, as he wooed investors on Thursday at the World Economic Forum in Switzerland. Cyril Ramaphosa, who could replace Jacob Zuma as president within weeks, told investors in Davos that "a new mood" had emerged in South Africa. Ramaphosa took over from Zuma as head of the ... read more

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