The alleged massacre took place on market day in Hombori municipality, in the central region of Douentza, after a Mali military convoy hit an improvised explosive device.
The UN has repeatedly accused Malian soldiers of summarily executing civilians and suspected militants over the course of their decade-long fight against armed groups.
(Reuters Archive)
At least 50 civilians were killed
during a military operation conducted by Mali's army and
foreign troops on April 19, the United Nations has said in a
report.
The alleged April massacre took place on market day in Hombori municipality, in the central region of Douentza, after a Mali military convoy hit an improvised explosive device, the UN report said on Wednesday.
The massacre victims included a woman and a child, the UN's peacekeeping mission MINUSMA said in the quarterly report on human rights violations in the violence-hit West African country.
It did not specify the nationality of the foreign military personnel accompanying local troops.
Some 500 people were briefly detained during the military operation prompted by the explosion, but most were later freed.
Days later, a single Malian soldier allegedly executed 20 of the 27 civilians still held at the military camp in Hombori, according to the UN.
Mali's military spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Authorities have previously denied accusations that soldiers tortured civilians held in Hombori, the report said.
READ MORE: Mali vows improved security after France's withdrawal
[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ebUuIwOX3Ug[/embed]
High civilian death toll
The UN has repeatedly accused Malian soldiers of summarily
executing civilians and suspected militants over the course of
their decade-long fight against groups linked to Al Qaeda and Daesh.
Mali's military government, which took power in a 2020 coup,
has been battling armed groups with the help of private
military contractors belonging to Russia's Wagner group.
MINUSMA's Tuesday report documented 317 civilian deaths
between April 1 and June 30, 42 percent lower than the 543
registered during the first quarter of 2022.
While armed groups carry out most of the abuses, Malian
defence and security forces were responsible for just over a
quarter of violent acts against civilians recorded during that
period, according to the report.
Mali's military has in some cases acknowledged its forces
were implicated in executions and other abuses. But few soldiers
have faced criminal charges.
Authorities have banned UN investigators from a site where
Malian troops and suspected Russian fighters allegedly executed
around 300 civilian men during a military operation in March.
Both Mali and Russia have previously said the Wagner group is not made of mercenaries but trainers helping local troops with equipment bought from Russia.
READ MORE:Suspected Daesh attack kills dozens of Mali soldiers
Source: Reuters
Ukrainian gunners prepare to fire with a self-propelled multiple rocket launcher at a position near a frontline in Donetsk region on August 27. Anatolii Stepanov/AFP/Getty Images
The White House says it has seen reports that Ukraine has begun a counteroffensive against Russian forces in southern Ukraine but does not want to comment further on specific Ukrainian military operations, John Kirby, the communications coordinator for the National Security Council, said.
Kirby did note, however, that regardless of the size, scale and scope of the latest counteroffensive, the Ukrainians “have already had an impact on Russian military capabilities.”
“Because the Russians have had to pull resources from the east simply because of reports that the Ukrainians might be going more on the offense in the south,” Kirby said. “And so they've had to deplete certain units …in certain areas in the East in the Donbass, to respond to what they clearly believed was a looming threat of a counter offensive."
Kirby also said that Russia “continues to have manpower problems” in Ukraine, and is trying to expand its recruitment of fighters inside Russia as well as “entice” some of their conscripts and contract soldiers to serve beyond their time frames.
That is “because they are experiencing manpower challenges—manpower challenges that are not made any easier by the way they’ve had to respond to reports of a potential counteroffensive by the Ukrainians,” Kirby said.
Kirby also said that “the idea of going on the offense is not new to the Ukrainians.”
“Now I recognize that what we're talking about here is the potential for a major counteroffensive, which is different than going on the offense in a more localized way,” Kirby said. But he said Ukrainian forces “have been taking the fight to the Russians inside” Ukraine for quite some time now, including in the early months of the war around the capital Kyiv.
“So, it’s not a new development for them to do this,” Kirby said.
What Russia is saying: Moscow on Monday acknowledged Kyiv’s counteroffensive in Ukraine’s south, but said the Ukrainian troops “suffered heavy losses” and “failed miserably” in their “attempted” offensive.
Ukrainian forces on Monday “attempted an offensive in the Mykolaiv and Kherson regions from three directions,” the Russian defense ministry said in a statement, adding, "as a result of the active defense of the grouping of Russian troops, units of the Armed Forces of Ukraine suffered heavy losses."
The ministry said that during the fighting, 26 Ukrainian tanks, 23 infantry fighting vehicles, nine other armored fighting vehicles were destroyed and two Su-25 attack aircraft were shot down.
“Another attempt at offensive actions by the enemy failed miserably,” it concluded.
Russia focuses on Ukraine's southern provinces as massive redeployment is underway according to Kiev amid resumption of grain exports at its blockaded Black Sea ports as the conflict enters 155th day.
Ukraine has made clear it intends to recapture the southern city of Kherson, which fell to Russia in the early days of the conflict.
(Reuters)
Wednesday, July 27, 2022
Russia redeploys troops to Ukraine's south — Kiev
Russian forces took over Ukraine's second-biggest power plant and are conducting a "massive redeployment" of troops to southern regions of Melitopol, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson, a Ukrainian presidential adviser said, amid expectations of a Ukrainian counter-offensive.
Oleksiy Arestovych, an adviser to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, confirmed the capture of the Soviet-era coal-fired Vuhlehirsk power plant in the eastern Donetsk region, but said it was only a "tiny tactical advantage" for Russia.
The Russian redeployment to the south appeared to be a switch to strategic defence from offence, he added.
For live updates from Wednesday (July 27), click here