French soldiers’ armoured car was leading convoy of around 60 vehicles travelling to northern desert town of Tessalit when it hit landmine. | |||||
Middle East Online | |||||
PARIS
- Three French peacekeeping soldiers died after their armoured car ran
over a landmine in Mali, the French presidency said Wednesday.
One
soldier was killed immediately in the blast on Tuesday and President
Francois Hollande learned "with great sadness" that two more soldiers
had died in the west African country, a statement said.
The
car was leading a convoy of around 60 vehicles travelling to the
northern desert town of Tessalit when it hit the mine, according to the
French defence ministry.
The troops were part of
Operation Barkhane, under which France has some 3,500 soldiers deployed
across five countries in the Sahel region, south of the Sahara desert,
to combat the jihadist insurgency raging there.
The
latest deaths bring to seven the number of French soldiers killed in
combat in the operation, according to defence ministry figures.
Ten
French soldiers were killed in an earlier military intervention
launched in January 2013 to oust Islamist rebels who had taken over vast
stretches of northern Mali in the chaos following a coup.
Countries
across west Africa are scrambling to tighten security following a
string of attacks against hotels and restaurants popular with foreigners
that have highlighted the growing reach of jihadist groups in the
region.
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Thursday, 14 April 2016
Three French peacekeeping soldiers killed in Mali mine blast
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