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Three Saudis die in Niger attack | |
(about 5 hours later) | |
Three Saudi tourists have been killed and three others injured after they were attacked by unidentified gunmen in Niger, officials there say. | |
The Saudis were travelling by car to Mali and were attacked near the border, according to a government spokesman. | The Saudis were travelling by car to Mali and were attacked near the border, according to a government spokesman. |
The three Saudis who were wounded were taken to hospital in the capital, Niamey, he said. | The three Saudis who were wounded were taken to hospital in the capital, Niamey, he said. |
The attack was reported near Djambala, where both Tuareg rebels and militants linked to al-Qaeda are active. | The attack was reported near Djambala, where both Tuareg rebels and militants linked to al-Qaeda are active. |
Saudi Deputy Foreign Minister Khaled bin Saud told Al-Arabiya TV that the tourists were assaulted after they stopped to perform morning prayers. | |
He said that though al-Qaeda was present in the area, there was no proof the group was involved. | |
"It appears to us so far that it was a robbery," he said. | |
Mauritania claim | |
Niger's Communication Minister Kassoum Moctar condemned the attack on state radio. | |
"Niger's government deplores these barbarous acts that were unfortunately perpetrated on its territory, and offers its condolences to the Saudi government," he said. | |
Mr Moctar was also quoted as saying that police had found two Malians who had been escorting the Saudis with their hands tied behind their backs in a nearby village. | |
Police and army forces had been deployed to hunt for the assailants, he said. | |
Last December, a Canadian UN envoy to Niger and his aide were kidnapped north-west of Niamey, also near the border with Mali. | |
The kidnapping was claimed by al-Qaeda's North African wing, al-Qaeda in the Land of the Islamic Maghreb, though Niger's president blamed it on Tuareg rebels. | |
On Monday, the al-Qaeda branch - which is based in Algeria but has been active in the north-west African Sahel region - also claimed responsibility for the kidnapping of two Italians in Mauritania earlier this month. | |
Italy said the claim was "plausible". |
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