Posted March 23, 2018 10:00 am by Comments

By Chris Eger

From the West African country of Mali comes a story of an isolated village where the locals have banded together to fight off terrorists with whatever they have.
Mali has been in the midst of a low-key war since 2012 that started off with Tuareg rebels fighting the government and transitioned to an international effort led by a 4,000-strong French military force (the country was a French colony until 1960) squaring off with a trio of wannabe Al-Qaeda jihadist groups in an ongoing asymmetric war pitting Western airpower against increasingly aggressive militants. However, according to the above report from France24, the village of Koina has been left without any protection by the army for months and the locals are doing what they have to.
“There is no symbol of the state’s authority here,” says village chief Boukadari Tangara, showing off old B&W photos of his prior service in the French military.
With the schools closed and insurgents prowling, Tangara has formed his own 25-member village defense force.
“The people here are fed-up with the jihadists,” said Adama Coulibaly, a member of Koina’s Brigade de Vigilance with interesting headgear.
A look at their equipment shows the force armed with break-action single barrel shotguns, hunting rifles, and

Source: Guns.com

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