At least seventeen soldiers and four civilians were killed on Sunday after an attack attributed to jihadists in the town of Tessit located in the so-called three-border area between Mali, Burkina and Niger, the army said. Malian Monday August 8 in the evening.

A previous army toll reported four soldiers and two civilians killed.

The Malian general staff also reports that nine soldiers are missing and 22 wounded, as well as significant material losses, including three destroyed vehicles and damage to other vehicles, installations of the Malian armed forces (FAMa) and civilian homes.

The toll is "always provisional and likely to change", according to the army statement, which says it killed seven enemies "probably of the Islamic State in the Greater Sahara and benefiting from drone and artillery support with the use of explosives and vehicle bomb".

In addition to the dead, the army evokes "an unknown number of wounded carried away by the attackers".

"The clandestine and uncoordinated overflight operations recorded by the FAMa, yesterday, Sunday and today, confirm the thesis that the terrorists benefited from major support and external expertise", assures the army.

Civilians, collateral victims

The sector of Tessit, located in a huge rural bush region not controlled by the state, is frequently the scene of clashes and attacks.

Armed groups affiliated with Al-Qaeda, gathered under the leadership of the Support Group for Islam and Muslims (GSIM, JNIM in Arabic), are fighting the Islamic State group in the Greater Sahara (EIGS), affiliated with the organization IS.

The jihadists seek control of this strategic and auriferous zone.

The Malian army, based in a military camp near the town of Tessit, has also often been attacked in this region.

In this area sometimes called the "Malian Gourma" also operate peacekeepers from the UN mission in Mali.

As for civilians, as elsewhere in Mali, they are caught in the crossfire of these actors in the conflict, and accused of being allies with one when they are not with the other.

Residents of the area have fled by the thousands, notably to the large neighboring town of Gao, some 150 km to the north.

Mali has been in turmoil since 2012. The jihadist spread, initially confined to the north of the country, has spread to central and southern Mali, as well as to neighboring Burkina Faso and Niger.

With AFP

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