https://s.france24.com/media/display/a5a8cc8c-4feb-11e9-b459-005056bff430/w:1240/p:16x9/mali_0.jpg
A soldier walks through the damage after an armed attack on the village of Ogossagou in Mali on March 25, 2019. The attack, which took place two days earlier, killed about 160 people. © Malian Presidency/handout via Reuters

Several killed in central Mali village attack, local officials say

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The attack occurred in Ogossagou, a village mainly inhabited by Fulani people, where around 160 died last March in a massacre blamed on Dogon militiamen.

About 30 gunmen carried out the new attack, village chief Aly Ousmane Barry told AFP, adding that he saw assailants set fire to part of the village.

"We have 20 dead. Some of them have been burned," said Aly Ousmane Barry.

A local government official, who requested anonymity, confirmed that the attack took place. He added that the attackers moved in several hours after Malian troops had pulled out of the area.

Eight more Malian soldiers were killed and four others injured in an ambush in the central Gao region on Friday, the army said.

The Malian force also suffered "material damage," the military said on social media sites, without saying who had carried out the attack in the village of Bintia.

Mali has been struggling to contain a jihadist revolt that broke out in the north of the country in 2012, claiming thousands of military and civilian lives since.

The conflict later spread to central Mali and neighbouring Burkina Faso and Niger. 

Ethnic violence surged in central Mali after the emergence of a group called the Katiba Macina in 2015.

Led by jihadist preacher Amadou Koufa, the organisation has drawn many recruits from among the Fulani people and been accused of carrying out ethnically motivated attacks.

Other communities, such as the Bambara and the Dogon have formed self-defence groups, which have in turn been accused of reprisal massacres.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)