LOCAL HUNTERS CAUSE MAYHEM IN MALI

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Local Hunters

It seems like the rampage caused by alleged Fulani herdsmen in Nigeria is gradually spreading in West Africa. Reports from Bamako say that at least 32 civilians were killed and ten are missing following an attack in central Mali, believed to have been carried out by ethnic hunters.
According to the reports, armed Dozo hunters, linked to the Dogon ethnic group, ambushed the isolated village of Koumaga in the Mopti region, killing dozens of Fulani herders, including children.
The leader of the local Tabila Pullaku association, Abel Diallo, said “the hunters surrounded the village, separated the Fulani people from the others and killed at least 32 civilians in cold blood”. Another 10 people were missing, he asserted. “The men were dressed in Dozo clothing but we wonder if they were all Dozo hunters,” said an elected official from the region, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Violence has increased over the past three years in central Mali between nomadic Fulani herders and Bambara and Dogon farmers, sparked by accusations of Fulanis grazing their cattle on Dogon land and disputes over access to land and water.
Central Mali is a vast area where the state is near-absent and jihadists, blamed for exacerbating the dispute, roam with little constraint. The Bambara and Dogon ethnic groups accuse the pastoralists of colluding with jihadists.

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