Niger violence sparks new wave of displacement: UN
Niamey, Niger- AFP
An increase in suspected militant attacks in western Niger has forced more and more people to flee their homes, according to the UN humanitarian agency.
“Forced displacement has intensified over the first five months of 2022 because of escalating violence by non-state actors who attack civilians and security forces,” an OCHA statement said on Monday 23rd May.
The UN agency counted 136 “security incidents” from January to April this year, compared to 93 during the same period last year.
From May 1 to 19, 43 civilians were killed and 22 more abducted in the Torodi, Tera and Gotheye departments in the Tillaberi region bordering Burkina Faso and Mali, it said.
Since the start of April this year, more than 34,700 people — or more than 5,000 households — living in Tillaberi “were forced to move to settle in safer areas”, it added.
According to Niger’s defence minister, Alkassoum Indatou, defence and security forces launched a clean-up operation on May 16.
The minister said that, as of May 23, two members of the defence and security forces had been wounded, and a vehicle damaged, while on the enemy side “65 elements of armed terrorist groups (had been) neutralised, 163 motorcycles destroyed, 12 logistics plots and eleven assembly bases destroyed.”
Niger, which is the world’s poorest country by the benchmark of the UN’s Human Development Index, is facing militant insurgencies both on its western border with Mali and Burkina Faso and on its southeastern frontier with Nigeria.
The country is home to tens of thousands of internally displaced people, as well as refugees from Nigeria, Mali and Burkina Faso.
The unstable regions of Tahou and Tillaberi — in the tri-border area between Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger — have since 2017 seen a spate of deadly attacks linked allegedly to ISIS and Al-Qaeda.
Niger is also suffering from a grave food crisis caused by drought and violence that has stopped farmers from working their land.