@Henri Christophe out here allowing WHITE MEN to tell Malians what to do. This is what this fukk nikka is excusing.
This is 1st person testimony from villagers:
Mali: Massacre by Army, Foreign Soldiers
A trader who had come to Moura from a nearby village to buy livestock on March 27 said:
White men speaking a bizarre language deployed throughout town. I wanted to flee but was afraid I’d be shot by the helicopter overhead. The white men arrested and then took me to a place near the sand dunes where I found hundreds of others. A Malian soldier kept saying, “You kill us at night, then by day pretend to be civilians.” Each night people were taken out and shot. On Wednesday [March 30], they took 10 men including the friend I’d come to the market with. I couldn’t look … I was afraid that if I looked at them, they’d pick me too. Throughout the different nights – that’s when most of the killing was done – I heard people whispering, “Oh God, they just took Hamidou or Hassan for execution.”
...
A witness detained with a group of about 50 detainees from several ethnic groups described seeing 17 men taken about 200 meters away and executed over 2 days. “They took out five, five and later seven. All of those killed were Peuhl.” he said.
Another man said:
I was one of 200 men in one place, detained under the scorching sun for three days. At around 11 p.m. on Monday [March 28], four whites and one Malian soldier ordered nine men to get up … [P]ointing at them one-by-one, they said, in Bambara, “You get up. … You, get up.” They ordered them to walk a few hundred meters. And then, Pa! Pa! Pa! I couldn’t see who executed them but we saw their bodies after daybreak on Tuesday. On Tuesday night it was the same thing: this time they took 13 a little further [away]. And again on Wednesday.
A trader who had come to the Moura market from a neighboring village described seeing 19 men, including two of his brothers, executed over a four-day period by white soldiers whom he believed, as a result of radio and social reports about the presence of foreign troops in Mali, were Russian:
My two brothers and I were in a friend’s house, drinking tea, waiting for the market to get going when we heard shooting. Seven Russians approached, gesturing for us to get up. There were no Malian soldiers with them. They searched us and the house, then took us east of the village, near the river, where we found another 100 men.
A few hours later, 10 or so more Russians, and a Malian army interpreter, asked if we knew why we were arrested. They lectured us about how everyone in that zone, everyone from the Peuhl community, had taken up the jihadist cause. Another group of Russians pointed at my brothers and another man. I thought they were going for interrogation. They took them several meters away and executed them, point blank. Over the next few days, I saw others – in groups of two or three killed the same way … nineteen in total.
Numerous other men were killed inside the village, including those who had refused an “order,” spread by word of mouth, to present themselves at the site where the other men were being detained.
One resident said:
Around 11 a.m. on Sunday [March 27], three white soldiers arrested me from my home, motioning for me to follow them. I was taken to an empty house where I found another 100 men. They didn’t hurt or interrogate us and we were released around 4 p.m. On Monday, around 8 a.m., women who’d been bringing food to their detained husbands brought a message: that the soldiers said all those detained in the house the previous day should present themselves. Those who didn’t, would be killed. I went. But after the operation ended, I saw a friend who’d refused their order – he was lying in blood in the street.
Two witnesses said that on the first day of the operation, about 40 detainees were ordered to dig three large mass graves several hundred meters away from where the hundreds of detainees were being held. Several witnesses said most executions occurred near or in the mass graves. “They ordered people up, ‘you, you, you …’ then ordered them to sit or lie down near the graves, and shot them, said one. Witnesses said that some of the bodies were later burned.
Witnesses said the killing stopped on the morning of March 31. Two men described hearing an order to stop the killing being transmitted by walkie-talkie: “On Thursday morning, after so many people were lying dead all around us, I heard in Bambara [language], a man I assumed was a Malian officer saying, ‘Stop killing people, let them go’ …. This is how we were saved. Honestly, if it were not for this order. I fear I would be dead,” one said.
This is inexcusable
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