An American aid worker has been kidnapped in a town northeast of
Niger’s capital Niamey, before being taken by his abductors to Mali,
according to a security source.
Armed men raided the house of the
aid worker on Friday, killing his two guards before driving him off
across the desert, the mayor of the town of Abalak said on Saturday.
“First
they came on a motorbike and killed the guards,” the mayor told Reuters
news agency by phone. “Then a 4×4 came and took him away and drove
towards the Mali border.”
Niger’s long, porous borders make it
occasionally vulnerable to the armed violence that has rocked
neighbouring states including Mali in recent years.
Northern Mali,
which fell under the control of al-Qaeda-linked groups in 2012 before a
French-led military intervention pushed them out, remains vulnerable to
attacks by fighters.
“At least two people were killed during an
exchange of gunfire” as the hostage was being taken, a security source
who wishes not to be named told AFP news agency, without revealing the
identity of the victims.
“All roads to Mali are being monitored.”
It is the first time that a US national has been kidnapped in Niger.
A
US Department of State spokesperson told AFP that they were aware of
reports of the kidnapping of an American citizen but declined to comment
further.
Previous incidents
In January 2011, two young
French people were kidnapped from a restaurant in Niamey and were killed
shortly afterwards during a rescue attempt.
The previous year,
five employees of the French energy firm Areva were kidnapped by
al-Qaeda in the Islamic Magreb (AQIM) from a uranium mine in Arlit,
north of the country.
Four men were freed in 2013 after the earlier release of the sole female hostage.
Earlier
this month, 22 soldiers from Niger were killed during an attack by
armed men who came from Mali to target a refugee camp in the Tahoua
region, northeast of Niamey.
Three soldiers were injured besides
the fatalities, according to Niger’s army, which has been deployed along
the country’s longer border with Mali to prevent armed groups getting
in.
Niger has called for a diplomatic solution to the conflict in Mali.
Despite
a peace accord and a 2013 international military intervention, large
tracts of Mali are still not controlled by domestic or foreign troops
and remain exposed to attacks by fighters.
“To resolve the
security problem in Mali is also to resolve the security problem in
Niger”, Niger’s president Mahamadou Issoufou said during a meeting with
German Chancellor Angela Merkel this week.
Niger also faces constant attacks in the southeast of the country from Boko Haram, the Nigerian armed group.

No comments:
Post a Comment