Audio By Carbonatix
Niger will allow US forces stationed in the country to arm the drones being used to track jihadists, having previously allowed their use only for surveillance, the government said Saturday.
The decision comes a month after jihadists ambushed a joint US-Niger patrol in a volatile area near the border with Mali, killing four American soldiers and four Nigerien troops.
But Defence Minister Kalla Moutari said the decision had been taken before the 4 October attack at Tongo Tongo.
“It was a negotiation that had been underway for a while. Arming the drones is an option we decided on before we learned of the tragedy at Tongo Tongo,” Moutari told state radio.
“We are dealing with very well-armed groups,” he said, and “armed drones are an appropriate and decisive response for fighting terrorism.”
Niger had been reluctant to let either the US or French troops on its soil use the drones as weapons, in part because of fears for civilian casualties.
“There is a possibility of mistakes, but there’s no such thing as a clean war,” Moutari said.
Last month’s attack was the deadliest US combat incident since President Donald Trump took office in January and shocked many Americans unaware of the military presence in the country, which at some 800 soldiers is the largest US deployment in Africa.
On Wednesday, a joint anti-jihadist force linking forces from Niger, Mali, Burkina Faso, Chad and Mauritania began operating with support from the French military, aimed at restricting the freedom of movement jihadist groups have had in the region.
The G5 Sahel’s activities will initially be confined to Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger, where governments have weak control over remote areas.
The United States this past week pledged $60 million to support the counter-terrorism force.
Latest Stories
-
Ofori-Atta’s reported Green Card status signals US does not fully agree with Process – Kofi Bentil
11 minutes -
High Court issues interim injunction over Afigya Sekyere East NPP polling station album
23 minutes -
Interdiction is ridiculous — Ofori-Boadu demands stronger punishment for teachers who sexually abuse students
38 minutes -
We expect sanctions for both teacher and student in Bole SHS misconduct case – Clement Apaak
53 minutes -
Teacher, student both culpable under GES code in Bole SHS misconduct case – Clement Apaak
56 minutes -
Even if it’s just two or three schools, we ought to be worried — Deputy Education Minister on Ghana’s student misconduct crisis
60 minutes -
Bole SHS teacher violated professional code by engaging student sexually – Deputy Education Minister
1 hour -
University campuses have no security — Gloria Ofori-Boadu calls for urgent safety policy reforms
1 hour -
Bentil calls for thorough probe into UCC student death, warns against premature conclusions
1 hour -
Education ministry, GES must act decisively to curb rising student indiscipline – Tuah-Yeboah
2 hours -
Almost nobody wants to enforce rules in our schools – Kofi Bentil
2 hours -
Who is in charge? — Kofi Bentil questions parents over school discipline crisis
2 hours -
Livestream: Ofori-Atta US residency, public sector resignations and student safety take centre stage on Newsfile
2 hours -
Timber Millers condemn attack on Forestry Commission checkpoint in Bono East
2 hours -
‘My father wanted me on the farm, my mother wanted me in school’ — Sissala East MP
2 hours