Dozens Killed, Wounded in Central Mali Attack
BAMAKO (AP/Reuters) – At least 10 people have been killed and dozens of others wounded in a bomb attack near a military camp and airport in central Mali, according to an official and a military spokesperson.
Yacouba Maiga, a spokesperson for the regional governor, told the Reuters news agency that more than 60 people were wounded in the attack in the town of Sevare in the Mopti region on Saturday.
“The blast destroyed about 20 houses in the neighborhood. There are a total of nine dead and about 60 wounded, all civilians,” Maiga said.
Colonel Souleymane Dembele, the spokesperson for the Malian army, told the Associated Press news agency that at least 10 people were killed.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack.
In separate incidents on Saturday, the Malian army “destroyed a terrorist sanctuary in Mourdiah and neutralised some 60 terrorists in Boni”, the government said in a statement. Boni is also in the Mopti region.
Also on Saturday, a Malian air force helicopter crashed in a residential neighborhood of the capital Bamako, killing three military crew members and injuring six civilians, the government statement said. It said the crash occurred “following a typical aerial surveillance operation of Bamako”.
Images shared on social media from the Sevare attack showed several buildings, including a petrol station, destroyed by the blast as well as wounded people being given assistance.
Residents of Sevare said they were going to morning prayers at the mosque when they heard a loud explosion. “We heard gunfire. It was total confusion,” Ousmane Diallo, a villager in the area, told AP.
Earlier on Saturday, the West African country’s government said in a statement read on national television that “a terrorist attack” had been stopped by the army in Sevare.
“Three vehicles filled with explosives were destroyed by army drone fire,” the statement said, without giving further details on casualties.
Al Jazeera said the attack happened at 5am when most residents would have been asleep.
The government described the incident as “a complex attack” at the airport in Sevare, which is home to a Malian security forces base, UN peacekeepers and Russian fighters from the Wagner group.
“No one has claimed responsibility for this attack,” he said, adding that the governor in the region asked residents to urgently donate blood due to the high number of casualties.
The attack comes days after Daesh and Al-Qaeda affiliate groups reportedly took control of parts of the region.