Nigerian authorities reported that 18 people were killed and 30 others injured in explosions that hit the northeast of the country.
Earlier, Nigerian authorities announced an increase in cholera deaths and infections, according to local media.
The Nigerian Center for Disease Control and Prevention warned of a rising number of cholera cases nationwide, with 30 deaths and 1,141 suspected cases reported.
Earlier in June, three government officials and a soldier accompanying them were killed in southeastern Niger on Wednesday during an attack carried out by armed assailants believed to have crossed from neighboring Nigeria.
The army, in a statement without specifying the victims’ identities, stated: “Last Wednesday, armed individuals from Nigeria attacked a vehicle, resulting in the deaths of four people.”
Local sources indicated that the victims were government employees and a soldier on a mission in the Diffa region (southeast of the country).
The army confirmed that the assailants “fled towards Nigeria” following the attack.
The Diffa region borders Lake Chad, an area characterized by marshes and small islands that serve as strongholds for rebel groups, located between Nigeria, Niger, Cameroon, and Chad.
The army explained that the “reduction” of water levels in the Komadugu Yobe River currently provides “multiple crossing points from Nigeria” for terrorists to attack peaceful users of the main national road, where the attack occurred.
The Komadugu Yobe River serves as a natural boundary between the two countries and acts as a bulwark in Diffa against insurgents coming from Nigeria.
Following the Wednesday attack, local authorities “strictly prohibited until further notice the movement of all-terrain vehicles” without “military escort” on the road connecting the towns of Maine-Soroa and Diffa, a 70-kilometer stretch prone to incidents.
A former local official stated, “Terrorists mainly steal vehicles capable of traveling on rough roads, bearing major brand names, and undoubtedly resell them in Nigeria.”
In western Niger, near Burkina Faso and Mali, Niger is battling other rebel groups affiliated with the terrorist organizations Al-Qaeda and ISIS.
Hundreds of people demonstrated on Saturday in Tillaberi, demanding the ruling military regime to “establish rapid response units,” “an air base,” and “recruit civilian volunteers” to support the army in fighting rebel groups amidst continued attacks against civilians.