15 soldiers killed in Niger 'terrorist' attack: govt by AFP Staff Writers Niamey (AFP) May 5, 2021 Niger's government said Wednesday that 15 of its soldiers were killed in a "terrorist attack" near the border with Mali, bringing to 31 the number of troops killed in four days. Niger's defence ministry said "heavily armed men" had attacked troops serving under the anti-jihadist Almahaou ("whirlwind") operation near the town of Banibangou in the Tillaberi region on Tuesday afternoon. Four more soldiers were injured in the attack, the ministry said, with search operations continuing. "On the enemy's side, several terrorists were killed and equipment destroyed," it added in a statement, without giving further details on the circumstances of the attack. Tillaberi is located in the flashpoint "tri-border" region between Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso, the site of frequent bloody attacks by jihadist groups. On Saturday, 16 Nigerien soldiers were killed and another reported missing after armed men attacked a patrol in the Tahoua region, also close to Mali. The vast desert region, east of Tillaberi, is similarly a regular target for jihadists who target civilians as well as troops. On March 21, several hamlets in Tahoua's Tillia area were struck by coordinated attacks that left 141 people dead, according to the official toll -- the most deadly presumed jihadist assault in Niger in years. Niger is struggling with both the spillover of Nigeria's Boko Haram extremist movement in its southeast, and that of jihadists affiliated with the Islamic State group and Al-Qaeda in its west. It is the world's poorest nation, according to the UN's development rankings for 189 countries.
'It's all we have': the plight of S.Africa's informal miners Ermelo, South Africa (AFP) April 30, 2021 Darkness enveloped a disused mine in South Africa's Mpumalanga province as a pick-up truck left the site's entrance and drove off into the night, loaded with coal. Informal miner Bonginkosi Mhlanga threw a pickaxe over his shoulder and descended back below ground, where he would remain until daybreak. Locally known as "zama zamas" - "those who try and try" in the Zulu language - Mhlanga and his counterparts scrape a living by chipping away at abandoned mine shafts previously exploited by mini ... read more
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