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Senegal Builds Military Camp Near Border With Troubled Mali

The camp is being constructed at Goudiry in the east of the country, nearly 600 kilometers (370 miles) from the capital Dakar.

Senegalese soldiers patrol in Barra, on January 22, 2017. Photo: Carl de Souza/AFP

Senegal on Tuesday began building a military camp near its border with violence-torn Mali to address “cross-border threats (and) trafficking,” the defense ministry said.

The camp is being constructed at Goudiry in the east of the country, nearly 600 kilometers (370 miles) from the capital Dakar.

Neither the ministry nor the army gave details of troop numbers or the kind of equipment that the base would house.

Mali is in the grip of an eight-year jihadist insurgency that has spread into neighboring Niger and Burkina Faso, claiming thousands of lives and driving hundreds of thousands from their homes.

Senegal has so far been untouched but it has stepped up security and contributed troops to the UN peacekeeping force in Mali, and its courts have handed out several sentences in recent years for “terrorism.”

Barracks housing gendarmes — a police force under the control of the military — have also been built in Senegal’s north and east.

The ceremonial first stone of the camp in Goudiry was laid by armed forces minister Sidiki Kaba, flanked by army chief General Birame Diop, the military told AFP.

The ministry said in a statement the authorities planned to “intensify the territorial network” of the security forces “to adapt to changes in the regional strategic context and heighten the response to the public’s need in terms of security.”

Other than the threat of jihadism, the eastern border zone with Mali is “rife” with criminals and drug trafficking, an army official said.

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