AN attack in central Mali this week, blamed on jihadists, left dozens of soldiers and civilians dead, local sources said Thursday.
However, the Malian army reported only that it had repelled a “terrorist” attack on the Farabougou camp on Tuesday, without mentioning casualties.
Central Mali is a hotbed of the violence that is plaguing the Sahel region.
As elsewhere in the country, gathering and verifying information is complicated by the difficulty in accessing remote sites or independent sources.
The Mali authorities, dominated by the colonels who took power by force in 2020, are reluctant to talk about losses suffered and claim to have the upper hand over the armed groups.
A local politician, speaking on condition of anonymity for his own safety, told AFP that “the jihadist attack on Farabougou left around sixty soldiers and civilians dead”.
He also reported that some people were missing since the attack.
The army camp fell into the hands of the jihadists who, following their usual modus operandi, then quickly left the scene, he added.
“If we count the military and civilian dead and the people we haven’t heard from, that’s at least 62 people,” said another resident who also insisted on remaining anonymous.
He himself said he had no news of two of his brothers.
“I don’t know if they have been killed or if they are on the run or in hiding.”
A government employee also spoke of “dozens and dozens of victims” and reported that Farabougou, a town of a few thousand inhabitants, had been emptied.
The army acknowledged on Thursday that an attack had taken place, saying in a brief statement that it had delivered “a vigorous response that repelled a terrorist attack targeting the Farabougou camp”.
Since 2012, Mali has been battling an Islamist insurgency that erupted in the north of the vast West African state, claiming thousands of military and civilian lives.