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Malian troops kill jihadists on I Coast border: defence source

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AFP Bamako
Malian troops killed several jihadists near the country's southern border with Ivory Coast and destroyed the insurgents' camp in a forest straddling the frontier, a Malian army officer has said.

"We have just destroyed the main military camp of the jihadists in the south, in the Sama forest located on the Ivorian border," the officer told AFP by telephone yesterday, requesting anonymity.

Since last week, Malian army parachutists known as the Red Berets and regular troops stationed in the frontier region of Sikasso have been conducting operations against the insurgents, the officer said.

Another Malian security source said "arms, ammunition, motorbikes and strategic documents" were seized from the camp.
 

Asked for details about the jihadists, the source said they were members of the Islamist Ansar Dine group, which seeks to impose Sharia law in areas under its control while opposing

Western education models and vaccination campaigns.

A humanitarian source said two Malian soldiers were injured in the operation.

Malian troops yesterday also pressed on with anti-insurgent operations in the frontier town of Fakola, which was attacked and pillaged on June 28, for which Ansar Dine claimed responsibility.

Residents of the Ivorian town of Debete, located 30 kilometres (20 miles) from Fakola, confirmed that an operation was underway in the forest, and that several arrests had been made.

"There were battles in Sama forest," said a resident of Pogo, located on Ivory Coast's border with Mali.

Jihadist attacks are normally confined to Mali's restive northern desert region but areas bordering Mauritania have been targeted since the start of the year, and southern settlements more recently.

The north came under the control of Ansar Dine - which is Arabic for Defenders of Faith - and two other jihadist groups, Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb and the Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa, in April 2012.

A move south towards the capital by the extremists, who imposed a brutal version of sharia on inhabitants, prompted Mali's former colonial master France to intervene in January 2013, pounding their positions in the north.

Their organisational structure smashed, small pockets of armed Islamists managed to remain active, and continue to carry out occasional deadly attacks in the desert.

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First Published: Jul 17 2015 | 5:07 AM IST

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