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CrisisWatch: February Alerts and January Trends 2022

The International Crisis Group is an independent, non-profit, non-governmental organisation committed to preventing and resolving deadly conflict

Burkina-faso , Nord , Cameroon , Sanmatenga , Region-du-centre-nord , Est , Mali , Niger , Tebaram , Tahoua , Nigeria , Limbe

Cattle in the front line in troubled eastern DR Congo

Cattle in the front line in troubled eastern DR Congo
modernghana.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from modernghana.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Rwanda , Ngiti , Bundibugyo , Uganda , Kivu , Sud , Congo , Ugandan , Bosco-ndaura , Isaac-kamwenda , Jacques-kisembo , Development-of-the-congo

ACLED Regional Overview – Africa (29 May - 4 June 2021) - Mali


ACLED Regional Overview – Africa (29 May - 4 June 2021)
Format
Last week in Africa, prominent national political figures survived assassination attempts in Uganda and Somalia; the French government announced a suspension of joint military operations in Mali, despite ongoing attacks by Islamist militants throughout the Central Sahel; and the government extended the state of siege in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, amid sustained and deadly attacks by multiple rebel groups in the region.
The French government announced that they would suspend joint operations with state forces in
Mali, in response to the ouster of the country’s transitional president and prime minister in a military coup during the previous week (VOA, 3 June 2021). The decision came amid ongoing Islamist militant activity in the country. Suspected Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM) and affiliated Katiba Macina militants launched attacks in the Gao, Segou, Mopti, and Sikasso regions. Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) Greater Sahara faction militants were also active in the Gao and Menaka regions.

Burkina-faso , Benue , Nigeria-general , Nigeria , Kivu , Eastern , Kenya , Congo , Mali , Ouham-pende , Ouham-pendét , Central-african-republic

ACLED Regional Overview – Africa (17-23 April 2021) - Chad


ACLED Regional Overview – Africa (17-23 April 2021)
Format
Last week in Africa, Chadian President Idriss Deby Itno was killed on the battlefield by rebel fighters, prompting a military takeover of the government; international forces maintained a prominent role in combatting entrenched Islamist and domestic militant insurgencies across the Sahel and central Africa; and dozens of fatalities were reported during ongoing intercommunal violence in South Sudan and Ethiopia.
In
Chad, President Idriss Deby Itno died from injuries sustained during clashes with Front for Change and Concord in Chad (FACT) militants on the frontlines in Kanem region. Following his death, the Chadian constitution was suspended, the National Assembly was dissolved, and a Transitional Military Council, headed by Deby’s son, Mahamat Idriss Deby Itno, was established and took over the government (DW, 21 April 2021). Clashes between FACT and Chadian military forces continued throughout the week in western Kanem province.

South-sudan , Niger , Nigeria , Congo , Mopti , Mali , Burkina-faso , Bakura , Sokoto , Chad , Maradun , Zamfara

CrisisWatch: March Alerts and February Trends 2021


February 2021
Criminal groups abducted hundreds in north west, while ethnic and regional tensions ran high in south amid farmer-herder conflict; meanwhile, tensions rose in south east between govt and Biafra secessionists. Criminal groups in Feb reportedly killed at least 112 and kidnapped over 450 people, mostly in Katsina, Kaduna, Sokoto and Zamfara states (north west), but also in Niger state (Middle Belt). Notably, armed group 17 Feb abducted 42 students and school personnel in Niger state, released them 27 Feb; 26 Feb kidnapped 279 girls in Zamfara state. Meanwhile, Auwalun Daudawa, who masterminded Dec 2020 abduction of 344 students in Katsina state, 8 Feb laid down arms along with five of his troops. Amid rise in herder-farmer and intercommunal violence in south since Jan, clashes between ethnic Hausa and Fulani on one hand, and ethnic Yoruba on the other, early Feb killed two dozen people in Oyo state capital Ibadan (south west). Nobel laureate in literature Wole Soyinka 6 Feb warned situation could spiral into civil war and former President Abdulsalam Abubakar 16 Feb said it could lead to “point of no return”. In Imo state (south east), security forces stepped up operations against Eastern Security Network (ESN), paramilitary wing of outlawed secessionist group Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB); army 18 Feb deployed helicopters and hundreds of troops in Orlu and Orsu areas, razing several ESN camps; IPOB same day said govt had triggered “second Nigeria-Biafra war”. Boko Haram (BH) attacks continued in Borno state (north east) despite military operations. Army 9-10 Feb repelled insurgent attacks on base in Rann town and on Askira Uba town, killing at least 50 combatants. BH splinter group Islamic State West Africa Province 15 Feb killed at least seven soldiers in Marte area; next day launched coordinated attacks in Marte and Gubio areas, death toll unknown; 19 Feb raided several villages in Dikwa area, displacing thousands. BH rocket attack on state capital Maiduguri 23 Feb reportedly left 16 dead. Military 15 Feb said troops had killed some 80 insurgents from BH faction led by Abubakar Shekau (JAS) in “recent” operations in Sambisa forest; at least two senior JAS figures reportedly among those killed.

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