Tamkoutat massacre

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LocationTamkoutat and nearby areas, Ménaka Region, Mali
DateFebruary 6, 2014
TargetImghad Tuareg civilians
Deaths31–35
Tamkoutat massacre
Part of Inter-communal conflicts of the Mali War
LocationTamkoutat and nearby areas, Ménaka Region, Mali
DateFebruary 6, 2014
TargetImghad Tuareg civilians
Deaths31–35
Injured6
PerpetratorFulani militants (per MINUSMA, Human Rights Watch, Reuters, and the Malian Ministry of National Reconciliation)

MOJWA (per Malian Ministry of Defense, Malian Ministry of Internal Security, and the MNLA)
No. of participants
12–20

On February 6, 2014, between thirty-one and thirty-five Imghad Tuareg civilians were massacred by Fulani militants that may have been connected to the jihadist outfit Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa (MOJWA) in and around Tamkoutat, Ménaka Region, Mali.

In late 2013, after jihadist forces were expelled from Ménaka Region, tensions rose between Tuaregs and Fulani. The first outbreak of conflict between the two groups occurred on November 7, 2013, between Djebok and Tamkoutat, when twenty-five carnival workers coming from Djebok were arrested and robbed of four million CFA francs. Survivors stated that the assailants spoke Arabic in a Tamacheq accent and claimed to be from MOJWA.[1]

On the night between November 18 and 19, a seventy-year-old man and a three-year-old girl were murdered in the village of Intakabar. A seventy-year-old woman and a ten-year-old girl were injured in the attack. The victims were all relatives of El Hadj Ag Gamou, the commander of the Imghad Tuareg GATIA militia. Gamou assessed that the perpetrators of the murders were Fulani MOJWA militants.[2] In response to the attack, Imghad Tuaregs assassinated a notable from Djebok. Clashes then erupted between Fulani and Tuaregs leaving several Tuaregs dead and over fifty Fulani dead, but little is known about them.[3] Fifty-three Fulani civilians were then massacred by Tuaregs in Tin-Hama on November 18.[4]

Abdoul-Aziz Souleymane, a local Fulani leader, stated that the reason many Fulani in the region joined MOJWA was less out of jihadism and more to obtain weapons to defend their livestock from Tuareg raids. Souleymane clarified that MOJWA's ranks also include Songhai and Arab fighters as well.[5] New tensions broke out between Fulani and Tuaregs on February 4. Fulani civilians stated a Fulani MOJWA member was arrested by Tuaregs and sent to MINUSMA in late January, and that three Fulani civilians were killed by Tuaregs on February 2.[6] This recent spate of violence was not connected to the Mali War, and came as a result of long-standing disputes over arable land for grazing.[7]

Massacre

Aftermath

References

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