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Ambush Claims Lives of Three Niger Officials, One Soldier Near Border With Nigeria, Army Says

© AP Photo / Jerome DelayA Wednesday, March 18, 2015 photo from files showing Chadian soldiers escorting a group of journalists as they ride on trucks and pickups in the Nigerian city of Damasak, Nigeria.
A Wednesday, March 18, 2015 photo from files showing Chadian soldiers escorting a group of journalists as they ride on trucks and pickups in the Nigerian city of Damasak, Nigeria. - Sputnik Africa, 1920, 02.06.2024
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Three officials and a soldier escorting them were killed this week in southwestern Niger by gunmen who crossed the border from Nigeria, authorities in the West African country said Sunday.
"On Wednesday, armed individuals from Nigeria attacked a vehicle, killing four people," the army said, without identifying the victims.
It said the assailants then "returned to Nigeria."
Locals said the four were visiting Diffa, a region that has endured a series of fatal attacks since 2015 by fighters from Boko Haram* and the Islamic State in West Africa (ISWAP)*. The Diffa region is on the shores of Lake Chad, which is bordered by Cameroon, Chad, Niger, and Nigeria. Its swampy islands have become hideouts for armed jihadist groups.
The Komadougou Yobe river, which forms a natural border between Niger and Nigeria, had in the past helped protect Diffa from cross-border attacks.
But the water level has dropped, offering "multiple crossing points from Nigeria," which enabled ISWAP fighters to attack travelers on the main road, where this week's ambush occurred, the army said.
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Since the incident, the regional authorities have imposed an indefinite ban on vehicles "particularly 4x4s" from traveling without a military escort on the road most subject to attacks -- a 70-kilometer (40-mile) stretch linking Diffa town to the town of Maine Sorao.
A former local official told AFP that ambushers "particularly target top-brand all-terrain vehicles, which they resell in Nigeria."
In the western region of Tillaberi, near the border with Burkina Faso and Mali, Niger's armed forces are fighting other jihadist groups linked to Al-Qaeda* and the Daesh* group.
On Saturday, several hundred people demonstrated in Tillaberi, asking the military government in power in Niger to set up "rapid intervention units" and an "airbase" and to recruit civilian "volunteers" to help staunch attacks on the local population.
The military government, which seized power in a coup in July 2023, had complained that elected civilian president Mohamed Bazoum was not doing enough to stop the attacks.

*Terrorist organizations banned in Russia and many other states.
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