Suspected Fulani herdsmen kill 100 in Mali’s Dogon village
Running disagreement between Fulani herdsmen and local farmers of Dogon village in Central Mali seems unabating as an attack on a village inhabited by Dogon ethnic group has claimed more than 100 persons.
Herdsmen are fingered as responsible for the attack. The attack happened in Sobane-Kou, close to Sanga town, according to French-language news outlet RFI.
Previously, disagreements between the Fulani and Dogon had often been settled through negotiation, but the uprising – which spread to the centre of Mali by 2015 – decreased government control and increased the availability of weapons.
The bodies of the dead have been burned, says a local official, and the search for more bodies is ongoing.
There have been numerous attacks in Mali in recent months, some ethnic, some carried out by jihadist groups.
Clashes between Dogon hunters and semi-nomadic Fulani herders are frequent.
The mayor of nearby Bankass, Moulaye Guindo, told Reuters news agency that Fulanis from that district had attacked Sobane-Kou after nightfall.
A local official in the Koundou area, where the village is located, told the AFP agency: “Right now we have 95 dead civilians. The bodies are burned, we are continuing to look for others.”
Clashes between the two groups have grown more frequent since a militant Islamist uprising in northern Mali in 2012.
In the same region in March, more than 130 Fulani villagers were killed by armed men wearing traditional Dogon hunters’ clothing.
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