Tourine ambush
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| Tourine ambush | |||||||
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| Part of the Insurgency in the Maghreb (2002–present) | |||||||
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| Strength | |||||||
| Unknown | ~50 men | ||||||
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| 12 captured and executed | Unknown | ||||||
The Tourine ambush, also known as the Tourine massacre, was an attack on September 14, 2008, in which jihadists from Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) ambushed Mauritanian soldiers in the village of Tourine, near Zouérat, Mauritania. The ambush was the first major attack by AQIM during the Insurgency in the Sahel, and sparked major changes in the Mauritanian military.[1]
Since 2005, remnants of the jihadist Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC) militia that committed various massacres during the Algerian Civil War began conducting an insurgency in rural Mauritania and Mali.[2] Between 2005 and 2008, the group recruited from Mauritanian madrasas, and renamed itself to Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and established ties with the global Al-Qaeda network in 2007.[3]
AQIM was able to gain so much influence in Mauritania due to the country's relatively weak military and impoverished, rural society.[2]