Around 100 people were killed in clashes between artisanal gold miners in north Chad on May 23rd and May 24th, defence minister Daoud Yaya Brahim said on Monday.
The violence broke out during the night at an informal gold mining site in the mountainous Kouri Bougoudi district, near the border with Libya.
Chad’s government sent a fact-finding mission to the site on May 25th to assess the unrest and restore calm, saying at the time that human lives were lost and several people injured without giving numbers.
“The death toll we established after our mission on the ground reaches around 100 dead,” Mr Brahim told Reuters.
READ SOME MORE
With a glut of electric cars on sale for under €30,000, will Irish people make the switch?
‘I learned to hide my Irish accent, or at least to feel deeply ashamed of it’
David W. Higgins: Moving to Australia? Beware, their economic fairytale won’t last forever
Who was Shamsud-Din Jabbar, the suspect in New Orleans truck attack?
All informal mining operations have been suspended and we have proceeded to remove people from the site, he added. – Reuters