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Mali prime minister sacks military chiefs after Fulani massacre

Mali's government on Sunday announced the sacking of senior military officers and the dissolution of a militia, following the massacre of more than 130 Muslims from the Fulani ethnic group.

Fulanis says the need more protection against targeted attacks in central Mali.
Fulanis says the need more protection against targeted attacks in central Mali. AFP/Annie Rosemberg
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The attack - one of the most savage in a region where ethnic and jihadist violence is escalating - took place on Saturday in the village of Ogossagou in central Mali, close to the border with Burkina Faso.

Prime Minister Soumeylou Boubeye Maiga said: "The protection of the population will remain the monopoly of the state."

He said new military chiefs would be named and that the Dan Nan Ambassagou association, composed of Dogon hunters, had been dissolved.

"At least 134 civilians, including women and children, have been killed and at least 55 injured," UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in a communiqué.

The massacre took place just as a delegation from the UN Security Council visited the Sahel region to assess the jihadist threat in the region.

There have been sporadic clashes between nomadic Fulani herders and the Dogon ethnic group over access to land and water for many years.

But since 2014 jihadist fighters in the area have been fomenting further violence.

A group led by radical Islamist preacher Amadou Koufa has recruited mainly from the Muslim Fulani community leading to an increase in inter-ethnic violence.

In January, Dogon hunters were blamed for the killing of 37 people in another Fulani village, Koulogon, in the same region.

And last year, 500 civilians died in similar clashes, according to United Nations figures.

Ready access to weapons

For Baba Dakono, researcher at Bamako-based Institut d'etudes et de securité, the increasing tension in the region since 2014 is partly due to a weak state but also easy access to weapons.

“It means that conflicts between different socio-economic groups which would have used clubs now involve Kalashnikovs, causing many more victims,” he told RFI. “Revenge attacks are also far more violent.”

The Fulani have repeatedly called for more protection from local authorities. But the government in Bamako has denied their accusations that it turns a blind eye to - or even encourages - Dogon attacks on the Fulani.

Dakono says the army is present in the region from time to time and carries out occasional patrols but the army cannot even protect itself.

“The army itself is being targeted by these attacks so it’s much more preoccupied [...] in protecting itself against the [jihadist] threat.

"The local population is in disarray faced with the insecurity," he added. "It means they turn to self-defence groups or take up weapons individually to cope with it.”

Investigations launched but not completed

Dakono says the country lacks the means to carry out investigations and make arrests in these type of attacks.

“Investigations are opened but can be difficult to conclude,” he said. "You need to be able to collect information at a precise moment in areas which are not always accessible due to the security situation. Many enquiries have been launched over the last few years but weren’t completed.”

Despite the presence of UN peacekeepers, a strong French military contingent and the creation of a five-nation military force in the region, jihadist violence has not abated.

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