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eagleoftheninth In the name of being honest from the Street without Joy Since: May, 2013 Relationship Status: With my statistically significant other
In the name of being honest
#1: Mar 17th 2021 at 2:39:18 AM

Because we already have an East Africa Thread, but not one for the other end of the continent. Got a news item from the region that caught your eye? A cool Senegalese hip-hop track? A jollof recipe? Share and discuss it here.

Today we'll start on a downer, with one of the region's worst and longest-running humanitarian crises: the Mali conflict, and its spillover onto surrounding regions. Niger attacks: More than 50 killed in attacks near Malian border. No words on the perpetrator(s) yet, but this particular territory is the turf of the Islamic State in the Greater Sahara, which is the local IS franchise responsible for the 2017 Tongo Tongo ambush that killed four US soldiers.

    Article 
At least 58 people have been killed in Niger after attacks near the border with Mali, the government has said.

Gunmen opened fire on four vehicles that were bringing people back from a market in the Tillabéri region.

No group has claimed the attacks, which happened on Monday.

However, there are currently two jihadist campaigns in Niger - one in the west near Mali and Burkina Faso, and another in the south-east on the border with Nigeria.

In a statement read out on public television, the Niger government said that "groups of armed, still unidentified individuals intercepted four vehicles carrying passengers back from the weekly market of Banibangou to the villages of Chinedogar and Darey-Daye".

"The toll from these barbarous acts [is] 58 dead, one injured, a number of grain silos and two vehicles burned, and two more vehicles seized," it added.

The government also announced a three-day period of national mourning, starting from Wednesday.

It urged people to have "greater vigilance", and spoke of its "determination to relentlessly pursue the fight against criminality in all its forms".

A resident previously told AFP news agency that the series of attacks started with a shooting on a bus travelling to Chinedogar, in which about 20 people were killed.

Another said that the victims had been shopping at Banibangou, a popular market town close to the Malian border.

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FFShinra Beware the Crazy Man. from Ivalice, apparently Since: Jan, 2001 Relationship Status: Too sexy for my shirt
Beware the Crazy Man.
#2: Mar 17th 2021 at 8:40:24 AM

There is the Madness in Mali thread (about the aforementioned conflict), to be fair, but this is broader.

There was also recently another mass kidnapping in Nigeria, to add to the downers.

Final Fantasy, Foreign Policy, and Bollywood. Helluva combo, that...
FFShinra Beware the Crazy Man. from Ivalice, apparently Since: Jan, 2001 Relationship Status: Too sexy for my shirt
Beware the Crazy Man.
#3: Mar 31st 2021 at 5:47:21 AM

So with some ships having gone around the cape due to the Ever Given situation, I have heard that piracy in West Africa is some of the worst in the world at the moment. Anyone have any insight?

Final Fantasy, Foreign Policy, and Bollywood. Helluva combo, that...
XMenMutant22 The Feline Follies of Felix the Cat Since: Jan, 2012 Relationship Status: Hoping Senpai notices me
#4: Apr 22nd 2021 at 5:33:41 PM

This past Tuesday, The Electricity Company of Ghana has announced systematic power interruptions in the country would commence from May 10 to 17, 2021.

This daily 12-hour power shutdown, which would affect selected communities at different schedule times, would allow the company to continue ongoing work on the brand-new Pokuase Bulk [Power Supply] Supply Point.

However, the idea has been controversial by some residents and business owners, negatively referring to it as a case of "dumsor" (unexpected, persistent blackouts) which has plagued for nearly 5 years.

The following video report is in English:

eagleoftheninth In the name of being honest from the Street without Joy Since: May, 2013 Relationship Status: With my statistically significant other
In the name of being honest
#5: May 21st 2021 at 6:11:35 PM

Washington Post: Is Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau dead this time? The Nigerian military is investigating.

    Article 
DAKAR, Senegal — The Nigerian military is investigating claims that Abubakar Shekau, the Boko Haram leader who orchestrated mass kidnappings of schoolchildren during his decade-long war against Western influence, has died in northeast Nigeria.

“We are looking into it carefully,” Nigerian Army spokesman Mohammed Yerima said. “In the past, we have reported that he is dead and then he comes back. It has been embarrassing.”

An internal report by Nigeria’s intelligence agency said the militant commander — known for his grisly videos and use of child suicide bombers in massacres across the Lake Chad Basin — detonated explosives that killed him Wednesday when fighters with the Islamic State West Africa Province, or ISWAP, tried to capture him in his Sambisa Forest hideout.

The report was obtained by The Washington Post and confirmed as authentic by two Nigerian officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to discuss the matter publicly.

The Nigerian military and regional forces have declared Shekau dead at least four times since 2009. After such announcements, Shekau released video messages, mocking the government while firing bullets into the air.

The deaths of extremist commanders are notoriously hard to verify — especially in the dense bush where Boko Haram has carved out its stronghold. If a body turns up, Yerima said, the Nigerian authorities will rely on genetic testing before issuing any confirmation.

By Friday, local media outlets were mixed on whether Nigeria’s most wanted man was dead or just injured.

“We should take this with a pinch of salt because this is the fifth time Shekau has been officially killed,” said Bulama Bukarti, a Nigerian conflict researcher in London focused on Boko Haram.

In previous cases, military officials have taken credit for Shekau’s death. This is the first time his demise has been linked to extremist adversaries.

ISWAP — an offshoot that split from Shekau in 2016 — has long taken issue with Shekau’s pattern of brutalizing civilians. When Boko Haram stormed villages over the last 11 years, fighters tended to kill most residents, largely Muslims, and kidnap the rest.

Battles have periodically erupted between the factions, killing hundreds of fighters on both sides.

ISWAP is known to govern remote areas and collect taxes from residents in exchange for protection while striking at primarily military targets. (The organization has also punished people for cooperating with the government, researchers say.)

Shekau’s faction outraged those extremists over the years by staging attacks on what they viewed as their territory. In one 2018 statement, ISWAP called Shekau a “tumour” to extract.

That tension threatened his reign. Shekau commanded between 1,500 and 2,000 militants, according to a 2019 estimate from the International Crisis Group, while ISWAP had as many as 5,000.

Lately the larger force had been expanding its reach across northern Nigeria and into Cameroon, said Yan St-Pierre, a counterterrorism adviser and head of the Modern Security Consulting Group in Berlin.

“The last remaining domino was the Sambisa forest,” he said — Shekau’s stronghold.

Since the conflict began, Boko Haram and its offshoot have killed 30,000 people around the Lake Chad Basin. The group’s violence has driven more than 2 million people from their homes in Nigeria and neighboring countries.

Shekau took control in 2009 after the death of Boko Haram founder Mohammed Yusuf.

Yusuf had been a firebrand preacher, calling for the strict application of Islamic law. He drew massive crowds in Nigeria’s northeastern Borno state, advocating against Western education — Boko Haram’s name loosely translates to “Western education is forbidden” — but did not openly coach his followers to embrace violence.

Then Nigerian security forces killed Yusuf during an uprising, and Shekau assumed power, steering the movement into a bloody insurgency.

Fighters stormed villages, torched dwellings and drafted people into their ranks. Men became soldiers. Women were forced into marriage and endured a culture of sexual assault.

Shekau exploited children as suicide bombers on a large scale. Boko Haram routinely strapped bombs onto girls and sent them into crowds.

The group was behind the 2014 kidnappings of the Chibok girls — a mass abduction of 276 students from their school — and has inspired a slew of copycat captors across Nigeria’s north.

If Shekau is indeed dead, the insecurity rocking life in the region is still far from over, said Matthew Page, formerly the U.S. intelligence community’s top Nigeria expert.

Boko Haram fighters may defect to ISWAP, creating more unity between the militants. Or the infighting could intensify, which carries the risk of further uprooting communities.

“Just taking out one person isn’t a curtain call on the group,” Page said. “Over time, you may see degradation because there are junior terrorists running the show. But there can be volatile, unpredictable scenarios going forward.”

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FFShinra Beware the Crazy Man. from Ivalice, apparently Since: Jan, 2001 Relationship Status: Too sexy for my shirt
Beware the Crazy Man.
#6: May 22nd 2021 at 12:42:02 AM

Seems the Chief of the Nigerian Army was killed in a plane crash.

I wonder how that will go in the fight against Boko Haram. Or if it was indeed an accident...

Final Fantasy, Foreign Policy, and Bollywood. Helluva combo, that...
eagleoftheninth In the name of being honest from the Street without Joy Since: May, 2013 Relationship Status: With my statistically significant other
In the name of being honest
#7: Jun 1st 2021 at 3:53:29 PM

Some non-cursed Mali content for once: renowned kora musician Toumani Diabaté released his newest album Kôrôlén earlier this year. It's a collab with the London Symphony Orchestra and a really, really lovely ambient listen.

Echoing hymn of my fellow passerine | Art blog (under construction)
eagleoftheninth In the name of being honest from the Street without Joy Since: May, 2013 Relationship Status: With my statistically significant other
In the name of being honest
#8: Jun 4th 2021 at 8:40:41 PM

CNN: Nigeria bans Twitter after company deletes President Buhari's tweet.

    Article 
Abuja, Nigeria (CNN)The Nigerian government says it has "indefinitely suspended" Twitter's operations in the country, the Ministry of Information and Culture announced in a statement on Friday.

"The Federal Government has suspended, indefinitely, the operations of the microblogging and social networking service, Twitter, in Nigeria," it read.

The statement, which was posted on the ministry's official Twitter handle on Friday evening, accused the American social media company of allowing its platform to be used "for activities that are capable of undermining Nigeria's corporate existence."

The suspension comes two days after Twitter deleted a tweet by President Muhammadu Buhari that was widely perceived as offensive.

In that tweet on Tuesday, the Nigerian leader threatened to deal with people in the country's southeast, who he blames for the recurring attacks on public infrastructure in the region.

"Many of those misbehaving today are too young to be aware of the destruction and loss of lives that occurred during the Nigerian Civil War. Those of us in the fields for 30 months, who went through the war, will treat them in the language they understand," Buhari wrote in the now-deleted tweet, referring to the brutal two-year Nigeria-Biafra war, which killed an estimated one to three million people, mostly from the Igbo tribe in the eastern part of the country between 1967-1970.

The tweet was deleted Wednesday after many Nigerians flagged it to Twitter. Information Minister Lai Mohammed criticized Twitter's action and accused the social media giant of "double standards."

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AngrokVa indighost | he/them Since: Feb, 2012 Relationship Status: Oh my word! I'm gay!
indighost | he/them
#9: Jun 5th 2021 at 9:08:33 AM

I should also add that many Nigerians have started using VPNs so they can continue to use Twitter. This resulted in a significant amount of Twitter trends here in the US related to the ban that started popping up overnight, mostly Nigerians tweeting in protest against the ban.

Edited by AngrokVa on Jun 5th 2021 at 12:08:53 PM

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Mami Since: Oct, 2017 Relationship Status: Faithful to 2D
#10: Jun 5th 2021 at 11:49:49 AM

They are now saying they'll arrest Nigerians still using Twitter.

Well this whole thing has been an experience

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FFShinra Beware the Crazy Man. from Ivalice, apparently Since: Jan, 2001 Relationship Status: Too sexy for my shirt
Beware the Crazy Man.
#11: Jun 5th 2021 at 3:12:00 PM

A massacre has just occurred in the village of Solhan, in Burkina Faso. Over a hundred people killed by Islamic extremists.

Final Fantasy, Foreign Policy, and Bollywood. Helluva combo, that...
eagleoftheninth In the name of being honest from the Street without Joy Since: May, 2013 Relationship Status: With my statistically significant other
In the name of being honest
#12: Jun 5th 2021 at 11:13:52 PM

God. Is that region IS's regular haunt, or did they come raiding from across the Malian/Nigerien border?

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FFShinra Beware the Crazy Man. from Ivalice, apparently Since: Jan, 2001 Relationship Status: Too sexy for my shirt
Beware the Crazy Man.
#13: Jun 6th 2021 at 12:33:40 AM

No one knows for sure as there hasn't been a claim made by any group so far. Burkinabe government says terrorists, but it sounds like a stock answer.

However, Burkina Faso has been slowly destabilizing because of both of those insurgencies, so its quite likely that its one of those.

EDIT-

Death toll is at 132 now, FYI.

Edited by FFShinra on Jun 6th 2021 at 12:34:06 PM

Final Fantasy, Foreign Policy, and Bollywood. Helluva combo, that...
Ominae Organized Canine Bureau Special Agent Since: Jul, 2010
Organized Canine Bureau Special Agent
#14: Jun 9th 2021 at 3:22:44 AM

I’d hate to post it, but the usual news covering Trump has him giving his support for the Twitter ban in Nigeria.

"Exit muna si Polgas. Ang kailangan dito ay si Dobermaxx!"
windleopard from Nigeria Since: Nov, 2014 Relationship Status: Non-Canon
#15: Jun 9th 2021 at 3:28:39 AM

Trump, and anyone else supporting the ban, don't care about what this means for the Nigerian people. They just want to see someone stick it to a tech company that silences bigots on occasion.

Edited by windleopard on Jun 9th 2021 at 3:32:07 AM

Mami Since: Oct, 2017 Relationship Status: Faithful to 2D
#16: Jun 10th 2021 at 7:48:21 AM

Of course Trump supports the baby dictator...

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The_Dag Mona Megistus! from Bad to Worse (4 Score & 7 Years Ago) Relationship Status: This is not my beautiful wife!
Mona Megistus!
#17: Jun 10th 2021 at 8:12:08 AM

They censored a country’s head of state right in the middle of their political term. I can see why people would have a problem with that regardless of the content of their statements.

Edited by The_Dag on Jun 10th 2021 at 4:13:57 PM

Mankind is unloveable. No more kindness!
eagleoftheninth In the name of being honest from the Street without Joy Since: May, 2013 Relationship Status: With my statistically significant other
In the name of being honest
#18: Jun 10th 2021 at 8:52:14 AM

I'm pretty sure that threatening violence goes against the rules on most social media platforms.

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Mami Since: Oct, 2017 Relationship Status: Faithful to 2D
#19: Jun 10th 2021 at 11:13:58 AM

As a Nigerian- they should censor him more. Tie him to a chair and bind his mouth two while you're at it especially when you're basically advocating genocide. This is the same clown who just recently claimed the #endSARs protesters intended to drag him out of his office as if he den of corrupt imbeciles didn't let loose fire with no remorse on peaceful protesters

Edited by Mami on Jun 10th 2021 at 7:16:39 PM

I absolutely cannot help but adore handsome 2D boys
SteamKnight Since: Jun, 2018
#20: Jun 10th 2021 at 11:42:25 AM

@Nigeria vs. Twitter: Normally, this should have been a clear cut case where a social media platform deletes an offensive tweet, but the dictator isn't wrong when he claimed that it is a double standard, considering how not only Twitter but lots of other social media platforms do nothing when the offensive tweets come from fuckers with more "power" like those western wingnut politicians. Until social media platforms can be consistent with their enforcement of rule, Buhari, unfortunately, has a point about the double standard. His tweets (and existence) do deserve a ban. I hope that this will encourage social media platform to be more consistent with their enforcement of rule. Unequal enforcement of rule will just encourage people to not follow it. (A small part of me do think: "Is racism a part of this as well?" I know it sounds paranoid, and Buhari is a horrible person, so there are a lot of legitimate reasons for this deletion, but considering how out there racism can be and the fact western politicians don't fear this kind of thing, I can't help but wonder...)

@Burkina Faso: Damn, whenever I encounter news about that place, it's never a good one.

Edited by SteamKnight on Jun 11th 2021 at 1:48:16 AM

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The_Dag Mona Megistus! from Bad to Worse (4 Score & 7 Years Ago) Relationship Status: This is not my beautiful wife!
Mona Megistus!
#21: Jun 11th 2021 at 7:08:32 AM

[up][up][up] I was saying this is more about who they censored, when states do have a reason to defend themselves against agents of a foreign state [though currently defunct]

Edited by The_Dag on Jun 19th 2021 at 10:45:47 AM

Mankind is unloveable. No more kindness!
Ominae Organized Canine Bureau Special Agent Since: Jul, 2010
Organized Canine Bureau Special Agent
#22: Aug 7th 2021 at 7:14:53 AM

Kanu was being arrested by Abuja to trying to incite separatism in Biafra.

"Exit muna si Polgas. Ang kailangan dito ay si Dobermaxx!"
The_Dag Mona Megistus! from Bad to Worse (4 Score & 7 Years Ago) Relationship Status: This is not my beautiful wife!
Mona Megistus!
#23: Aug 11th 2021 at 6:07:59 PM

Are they a peaceful activist?

Mankind is unloveable. No more kindness!
Ramidel (Before Time Began) Relationship Status: Above such petty unnecessities
#24: Aug 11th 2021 at 11:54:00 PM

Sooorta. The IPOB are a peaceful protest movement who the Nigerian government are treating with their usual respect for human rights, including a recent massacre of unarmed protestors. However, Kanu has also been organizing a militia for completely unrelated reasonsnote , and the IPOB and the Eastern Security Network are essentially the same people with two hats, so Nigeria and the ESN have been clashing.

Edited by Ramidel on Aug 11th 2021 at 10:54:25 AM

I despise hypocrisy, unless of course it is my own.
eagleoftheninth In the name of being honest from the Street without Joy Since: May, 2013 Relationship Status: With my statistically significant other
In the name of being honest
#25: Aug 12th 2021 at 12:06:55 AM

Ah, TIL. You rarely hear the government taking the herder/ethnic minority side in this sort of conflict Never mind, I looked it up on Google and had it mistaken with the Fulani-Hausa conflicts elsewhere in eastern Nigeria, not the Igbo in former Biafra specifically.

Edited by eagleoftheninth on Aug 12th 2021 at 12:10:25 PM

Echoing hymn of my fellow passerine | Art blog (under construction)

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