Uganda forces kill 11 ADF rebels after incursion by AFP Staff Writers Kampala (AFP) Dec 13, 2022 Ugandan forces killed 11 ADF rebels after they crossed into the country from the Democratic Republic of Congo, the army said Tuesday, in the first known incursion by the group this year. The Allied Democratic Forces -- which the Islamic State group claims as its Central African offshoot -- is accused of slaughtering thousands of Congolese civilians and carrying out bombings in Uganda. An "estimated 20-30 ADF fighters last night crossed River Semliki... Our intelligence got wind of them and they were intercepted," Brigadier-General Felix Kulayigye, spokesman for the Ugandan military, said in a statement. "A fight is on to decisively deal with the group," he said, adding that 11 rebels had been killed while eight others had been taken into custody. "Operation is ongoing," he said. The ADF is among the most violent of more than 120 armed groups active in the DRC's volatile east. Uganda was hit by a series of bombings in October and November last year that killed five people and injured dozens, with the authorities blaming a "domestic terror group" with ties to the ADF for the blasts. Following the attacks, Uganda deployed forces and launched air and artillery strikes in the DRC against the ADF, after Kinshasa gave Kampala approval to pursue the militants on its soil. Last year, the United States placed the ADF on its list of "terrorist" organisations linked to IS. Uganda has also blamed the group for a foiled bomb attack in August 2021 on the funeral of an army commander who led a major offensive against Al-Shabaab militants in Somalia. The DRC has witnessed fierce fighting in recent months between Congolese troops and the M23 rebel group. Uganda announced last month that it would deploy around 1,000 soldiers in the eastern DRC as part of a joint regional force to quell the violence.
Jihadist-hit Niger brings back former soldiers, police Niamey (AFP) Dec 13, 2022 The Sahel state of Niger is urging former soldiers and police to get back into uniform to help the years-long battle against jihadists, security sources said on Tuesday. The authorities began an operation on Monday aimed at mustering a thousand men, "who won't go directly to the front, but will be used to secure important sites", one source said. Colonel Abdoulaye Mounkaila, a retired officer and member of Niger's Military Reserve Commission, told state TV that the defence ministry was "appealin ... read more
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