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Niger Military Clashes With Libya Convoy

Niger Military Libya Border

By DALATOU MAMANE AND RUKMINI CALLIMACHI   11/ 9/11 05:12 AM ET   AP

NIAMEY, Niger -- Niger's army intercepted a convoy of cars traveling south from Libya toward Mali, and a cache of arms was seized in the ensuing clash, the ministry of defense said Wednesday.

It was not immediately clear if the fighters were part of Moammar Gadhafi's fleeing entourage, but the direction in which the heavily armed convoy was traveling is the same route that was used last month by Gadhafi's intelligence chief, who is believed to be hiding in the remote dunes of Mali.

The statement by Defense Minister Mahamadou Karidio published in local newspapers on Wednesday said that one Nigerien soldier was killed and four wounded during the clash on Sunday.

The army seized two 14.5 mm, and four 12.7 mm machine guns, two ML-49 and three M-80 machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades, and ammunition, the statement said. The army also found a Thuraya satellite phone and seized six Toyota pickup trucks, as well as several prisoners.

Security experts have warned that arms traffickers could try to pilfer the armories left behind by Gadhafi's retreating army and transport them across the ungoverned desert separating Libya from Niger and Mali. The corridor has been used by arms smugglers and drug traffickers for decades, and is also where an al-Qaida-linked cell operates. Military experts are especially worried about Gadhafi's stockpile of surface-to-air missiles, many of which have an infrared homing device which would allow a fighter to simply aim it in the general direction of a passing plane to take it down.

Earlier this summer, the Niger military clashed with another convoy in the same region, this one loaded with explosives. One of the men driving the convoy told authorities during his subsequent interrogation that they were bringing the explosives from Libya, and were on their way to sell it to al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM, Karidio told the Associated Press in an interview in September.

Serge Hilpron, the head of Radio Nomad, a radio station that broadcast in the country's north where the incident took place, said that his sources indicated that there were both Libyan nationals and ethnic Tuaregs in the convoy.

"Because of the Libyan problem, there are now traffickers heading to Libya to pick up the arms left behind and to bring them here. These same traffickers then sell the arms to AQIM," he said.

___

Callimachi contributed to this report from Dakar, Senegal.

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NIAMEY, Niger -- Niger's army intercepted a convoy of cars traveling south from Libya toward Mali, and a cache of arms was seized in the ensuing clash, the ministry of defense said Wednesday. It was ...
NIAMEY, Niger -- Niger's army intercepted a convoy of cars traveling south from Libya toward Mali, and a cache of arms was seized in the ensuing clash, the ministry of defense said Wednesday. It was ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jasev01
10:37 AM on 11/10/2011
Ohh smugglers selling weapons to AQ who saw that coming? Oh that's right it was me i said that!!
10:05 PM on 11/09/2011
Whatever you do, Niger, don't allow the western nations to "help" you with the al-Qaeda issue. Africa's already been "helped" by Europeans enough. Facilitating the spread of al-Qaeda into sub-saharan Africa is part of the west's design to reassert economic control in that region. It starts off with offers to help combat al-Qaeda and ends up in neo-colonialism.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hvsmrspct
Rational faith and animosity towards oppression
01:59 AM on 11/10/2011
I disagree.
It starts earlier.
It begins with the west planting and supplying those later labeled with the generic term "al-Qaida" and then they offer assistance against those groups.
It's like an algorithm: create the problem, spread fear concerning it, offer a solution = the people welcome their own oppression and then thank the oppressors for it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mu chowdhury
Truth is elusive
05:18 AM on 11/10/2011
.....with puppets as head of revenues 'is part of the west (so-called international community)'s design to reassert economic control in that region'. Well said. F& F
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With Your Consent
Speak Truth to Power
06:05 PM on 11/09/2011
They didn't pay the vig.

Libya has become an asset play. Confiscation, chasing gold bars, oil terminals, protection, hiding assets, moving assets, bribes and kickbacks.

The war against Libya was a neoliberal crime.
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08:31 PM on 11/09/2011
There was no war against Libya.

There was a war against the Qaddafi regime.

Qaddafi does not equal Libya. Never has.
10:00 PM on 11/09/2011
Since the Gadhafi regime was the universally recognized governing authority in the nation of Libya, it was a war against Libya
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hvsmrspct
Rational faith and animosity towards oppression
02:08 AM on 11/10/2011
There is two points to be made here.
First Qaddafi didn't have a regime, he had no position of authority...he was only a symbol. After establishing one of the truest democracies on the planet, he stepped down from office in order to allow it to flourish.
Secondly, the war was a civil war began by rebels instigated by the west in order to establish a central banking system. The Libyan government complied with all of the demand sof the west and was praised for doing so...but they wouldn't risk their economy by having fiat money. They kept their gold backed currency and refusednthe international bankers intruding on this. This meant no debt! Which meant no loans, which meant no collapse, which meant no strings attached = no serfdom for the people. This is why we went to war.

Qaddafi made the ultimate mistake when he called on the African nations to establish a continental currency like the euro but based on gold. This would have instantly reduced their poverty and opened a door for the repayment of the debts of most African nations...what is more, it would have made their currency more valuable than any western currency giving them true economic power...that just could not be allowed.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mu chowdhury
Truth is elusive
05:30 AM on 11/10/2011
Specially so when there was no authorization from the purposefully interactive west (international community alias 'the theater of absurd') except a warmongering gang 'NATO'. Gaddafi was
an undisputed leader of Libya and west shared everything (truce), ideological (Guantanamo),
civil manner (lucrative souvenirs) after alluring for more than 4 decades. NATO liberated Libyan oil from the Libyans, in short.
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01:24 PM on 11/09/2011
Re the headline on the "World" page: the correct adjective associated with Niger is "Nigerien". The "Nigerian military" refers to the military forces of Nigeria.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Adeyemo Sodipo
We all belong to the human race!!!
01:56 PM on 11/09/2011
You are very good with your geography!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
UnknownSolider
08:19 PM on 11/09/2011
Google Maps...... use it
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adamben
yes i said yes i will yes
11:14 AM on 11/09/2011
and we saw this coming. are our leader asleep at the wheel or do they want our enemies to be better armed?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lambdin1
What's this?
01:16 PM on 11/09/2011
For some it is damned if you do and damned if you don't. More war is not a thing that any of us wants. Let the governments involved take care of their borders. You certainly would not like a government coming here to watch our borders would you?
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adamben
yes i said yes i will yes
01:51 PM on 11/09/2011
if terrorists where using our territory to murder people across the border and we did nothing to stop them then we would be fair game since we would be tacitly aiding in murder.

in any case, i think bombing ammo dumps, while not risk free, would be easy to do with drones.

btw i read reports from the nyt that stated that our troops in iraq, just after we invaded, just allowed the iraqi ammo dumps to be cleaned out over weeks and months. those armaments were used in ied's. it seemed obvious that they were going to use them to kill people.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mu chowdhury
Truth is elusive
03:09 PM on 11/09/2011
I think the other way around. This is what we think of war. No war, no work, especially for brain. Do you want 'all of ours turn into devil's workshop, if not already?
10:16 AM on 11/09/2011
This is no news. Libyan weapons are showing up all over the place.
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08:18 PM on 11/09/2011
In your fevered dreams, to be sure.
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Blodo
Time to build a better world
09:06 PM on 11/09/2011
Indeed. My next door neighbors just acquired a T-72 tank and now my wife wants one. When will this madness end?
09:21 AM on 11/09/2011
Hey! Where is the P.C. Police? You can't say "Niger" anymore. Aren't they going to change the name of the Country?
10:04 AM on 11/09/2011
tee-hee
03:14 PM on 11/09/2011
One 1d10t laughs at another one's babble.
10:06 AM on 11/09/2011
What you are referring to has two g's. The pronunciation is completely different, unless if you left school with a third grade education
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
09:13 AM on 11/09/2011
Setting up the supply lines to ship the weapons out of Libya to the buyers
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waldopepper
I'd tell you all about me if you were my friend.
04:09 PM on 11/09/2011
I believe you are misinterpreting the facts. This is not arms smuggling. This is rats leaving the sinking ship.