Senior al-Qaeda Affiliate Member, 4 Other Terrorists, Killed in Mali: French Military

Senior al-Qaeda Affiliate Member, 4 Other Terrorists, Killed in Mali: French Military
A French soldier involved in the regional anti-insurgent Operation Barkhane stands guard next to a Reaper drone at the French military airbase in Niamey on March 14, 2016. (Pascal Guyot/AFP via Getty Images)
Lorenz Duchamps
10/21/2021
Updated:
10/21/2021

The French military confirmed on Oct. 21 that a leading senior member and four other terrorists of the African-based al-Qaeda affiliate Katiba Serma were killed in an airstrike in Mali last week.

Nasser Al Tergui was spotted by a drone on Oct. 15 while in a vehicle carrying five individuals about 60 miles northwest of Gossi, a rural commune in Mali, according to the French military.

“The cross-checking of various information made it possible to confirm the presence ... of Nasser Al Tergui,” the French Ministry of the Armed Forces said in an Oct. 21 statement, French news agency AA reported.

Barkhane military forces, under which France has about 5,100 soldiers deployed across five countries in the Sahel region, launched a military operation the following day to intercept the vehicle, which refused to stop.

“In cooperation with the partner forces, after having again confirmed the presence of Nasser Al Tergui aboard the vehicle, the soldiers of the Barkhane force decided to launch an operation,” the army said.

A soldier of the French Army launches a mini-drone used to check the presence of jihadist groups in northern Burkina Faso, on Nov. 11, 2019. (Michele Cattani/AFP via Getty Images)
A soldier of the French Army launches a mini-drone used to check the presence of jihadist groups in northern Burkina Faso, on Nov. 11, 2019. (Michele Cattani/AFP via Getty Images)

Operation Barkhane was launched in 2014 to combat the jihadi insurgency in Africa’s Sahel region.

The ministry confirmed that two airstrikes were launched at the target, which destroyed the vehicle and the five Katiba Serma members, an armed group affiliated with al Qaeda—a multinational terrorist network that was founded in 1988 by Osama bin Laden, among several others.

Al Tergui’s death “will reduce the capacity to cause harm of an armed terrorist group known for carrying out attacks against local forces and numerous acts of violence against the local population,” the army said in a statement that was obtained by news agency AFP.

The jihadist commander joined al-Qaeda in 2012 and had “major operational responsibilities” in the terrorist group, it added.

“He was notably specialized in planting improvised explosive devices,” according to the statement.

Reuters contributed to this report.
Lorenz Duchamps is a news writer for NTD, The Epoch Times’ sister media, focusing primarily on the United States, world, and entertainment news.
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