Tazalit attack
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2:22 pm
| Tazalit attack | |
|---|---|
| Part of Jihadist insurgency in Niger | |
| Location | Tazalit refugee camp, Tahoua Region, Niger |
| Date | October 6, 2016 2:22 pm |
| Target | |
| Deaths | 22 Nigerien soldiers killed |
| Injured | 6 injured
|
| Perpetrator | Unknown jihadists |
The Tazalit attack,[1] also known as the Tazalit massacre,[2] occurred on October 6, 2016, when unknown jihadists attacked Nigerien forces at the Tazalit refugee camp in Niger, killing dozens of Nigerien soldiers. The attack was the deadliest attack on Nigerien forces so far during the jihadist insurgency in Niger.
Jihadist groups from Mali have travelled through Niger and conducted attacks on Nigerien forces sporadically in the early and mid-2010s. These attacks mainly took place in Tahoua Region, on the Nigerien-Malian border, and took place when jihadists trafficked arms from Libya.[3] Two main groups in the area that have attacked Nigerien forces in the past are Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb led by Abdelmalek Droukdel and Mokhtar Belmokhtar and elements of Al-Mourabitoun and MOJWA led by Adnan Abu Walid al-Sahrawi (the future founder of Islamic State in the Greater Sahara).[4] Sahrawi's forces and AQIM have been in open conflict since 2015, and Islamic State caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi recognized the creation of ISGS in October 2016.[4]
At the time of the attack, the Tazalit refugee camp hosted 4,000 Malian refugees.[5] Another area in Tahoua region had come under attack by unknown jihadists earlier that month, with no reaction from the Nigerien government.[6]