Deadly attack on Mauritania army

Deadly attack on Mauritania army

Twelve Mauritanian soldiers have been killed by suspected al-Qaeda operatives in a battle north of the capital Nouakchott, a senior military official has said.

Armed men ambushed an army unit on Monday patrolling the desert in Tourine, about 850km north of Nouakchott, a lieutenant-colonel told the Associated Press news agency.
The same account was also given by a senior official in the presidency.
The attack was the highest number of deaths suffered by the army since 2005, when fighters linked to Algeria's former Salafist Group for Call and Combat killed 15 soldiers in an assault on a desert outpost in Mgheiti.
Al-Qaeda in Islamic North Africa had called for Jihad to avenge the August 6 overthrow by the military of Sidi Ould Cheikh Abdallahi, Mauritania's first freely elected president.
Military training
Since the 2005 attack, the Group for Call and Combat has represented itself as a branch of Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda network operating in northern Africa.
The United States had sent dozens of troops to train Mauritania's military in the far northern deserts, hoping the country could act as a bulwark against the southward encroachment of al-Qaeda-linked operatives in North Africa.
But the US suspended those programs along with more than $20m in aid after the August coup.
In December 2007, armed men believed to be linked to al-Qaeda killed four French tourists, prompting organizers of the famous Dakar Rally to cancel the race this year.
PHOTO CAPTION
Mauritanian soldiers
Al-Jazeera

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