Malian troops, foreign forces executed 500 people in village in 2022 -
UN
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[May 12, 2023]
By Edward McAllister
DAKAR (Reuters) - Malian soldiers and unidentified "armed white men"
likely executed at least 500 people, and sexually assaulted or tortured
dozens of others during a five-day operation in the village of Moura in
central Mali last year, the U.N. Human Rights Office said on Friday.
On March 27, 2022, Malian soldiers and foreign personnel descended in
helicopters and opened fire on fleeing residents, the report said. In a
roundup of civilians in the following days, hundreds more were shot and
thrown in ditches.
The U.N. report on the incident was released after a months-long
investigation into what rights groups say is the worst atrocity in a
10-year conflict between Islamist groups and the army in which thousands
have died and millions have been displaced.
The identity of the white men was not clear, U.N. Human Rights Office
regional spokesperson Seif Magango said. But Western countries have
raised concerns over Russian private military contractor Wagner Group's
activities in Mali since late 2021, including allegations of its role in
the killings of civilians in Moura.
"These are extremely disturbing findings," U.N. High Commissioner for
Human Rights Volker Turk said, adding that the actions could amount to
war crimes or crimes against humanity.
Mali's military government and an army spokesman did not respond to a
Reuters request for comment. Authorities have previously said that
Islamist fighters, not civilians, were killed in Moura.
Mali, whose leaders seized power in a 2021 coup, and Russia have
previously maintained that Russian forces there are not mercenaries but
trainers helping local troops with equipment bought from Russia.
Russia's U.N. envoy Maria Molodtsova told a U.N. human rights meeting in
Geneva last week that those killed in Moura were militants and that the
military operation "contributed to peace and tranquillity".
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But the U.N. report backs up Reuters reporting at the time in which
witnesses said white men in army fatigues, speaking what the
residents believed was Russian, were involved.
The U.N. report was based on interviews with victims and witnesses
in the West African country, as well as forensic and satellite
imagery. A fact-finding team obtained the names of at least 238
victims, the U.N. said.
KILLING, RAPE, TORTURE
Moura was largely under the control of Islamist groups that since
2012 have carried out a campaign of violence against civilians,
despite interventions from international forces, including former
colonial power France.
French forces left last year amid a diplomatic spat with Mali's
junta. They stopped joint operations with Mali forces in February
2022.
Groups linked to al Qaeda and Islamic State have spread into Burkina
Faso and Niger, killing thousands and threatening to destabilise the
whole region.
Insurgents from Katiba Macina, a local group affiliated with al
Qaeda, returned fire when the soldiers arrived on March 27 last
year, the U.N. said.
A day later, soldiers went house to house searching for militants.
They executed people with long beards and ankle-length trousers, and
those with marks on their soldiers suggesting they were used to
carrying weapons.
"A group of men ... were led away by soldiers and shot in the head,
back or chest, and their bodies thrown into a ditch," the U.N. said.
At least 58 women and girls were raped or subjected to other forms
of sexual violence. Other civilians were tortured, the report said.
(Additional reporting by Emma Farge in Geneva; Editing by Toby
Chopra, Angus MacSwan and Alison Williams)
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