Explosions, sustained gunfire at airport in Niger capital, witnesses say

Explosions and gunfire were reported at Niger's capital Niamey airport and military airbase on Thursday morning, with no immediate claim of responsibility for the apparent attack.

Explosions, sustained gunfire at airport in Niger capital, witnesses say
  • Country:
  • Niger

​Explosions and sustained gunfire were ‌heard early ​on Thursday morning at the airport and military airbase in Niger's capital Niamey, witnesses said, in what a security source ‌described as an apparent attack on the facility.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for an attack. A Niger government spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The ‌Islamic State affiliate in the region claimed responsibility for an attack on the airport ‌in January. At the time, the group said it had targeted air command headquarters and drone assets and claimed to have "delivered a direct blow" to the Sahel country's counterinsurgency operations.

Niger, like its Sahel neighbours Mali ⁠and Burkina ​Faso, has struggled to ⁠contain attacks from jihadist groups linked to al Qaeda and Islamic State that have killed thousands and ⁠displaced millions across the three countries. On Thursday morning, the first explosions occurred at around 6 a.m. local ​time (0500 GMT) and sporadic gunfire was still audible nearly two hours later, the Reuters ⁠witness said.

Security forces had blocked off the area, the witnesses said. In the attack in January, Niger's Defence ⁠Ministry ​said militants had arrived on motorcycles and security forces quickly repelled them. It said four soldiers were wounded.

Material losses in that attack included a cache of ammunition that caught ⁠fire, the ministry said at the time, adding that there was damage to several civilian ⁠airplanes. Niger's military ruler, ⁠Abdourahamane Tiani, accused the presidents of France, Benin and Ivory Coast of sponsoring the January attack, without offering any evidence. He also ‌vowed retaliation.

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