Ƶ

Ambushes, mines, kidnappings: the Sahel’s roads of fear

Ambushes, mines, kidnappings: the Sahel’s roads of fear
Malian soldiers patrol in the streets of Gao, Mali. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 28 sec ago

Ambushes, mines, kidnappings: the Sahel’s roads of fear

Ambushes, mines, kidnappings: the Sahel’s roads of fear
  • With 433 recorded incidents since 2012, Mali’s National route 16 connecting Mopti in central Mali to Gao in the north, is “by far” the most dangerous transport axis

ABIDJAN: In the Sahel, a region plagued by jihadist violence, there are roads people steer clear of and others they travel on with their heart in their mouth.
Such was the case for Moussa, when in March he had to take his mother’s body to another village for burial, forcing him onto National route 15 in central Mali.
While on it, he witnessed a terrifying scene — jihadists on motorcycles, armed with military-grade weapons, their heads wrapped in turbans, kidnapping passengers from a bus.
“They stopped us, but seeing my mother’s body, they told us to continue,” he told AFP.
Africa’s turbulent Sahel region, sometimes referred to as the global epicenter of terrorism, has been plagued by violence from jihadist groups linked to Al-Qaeda or the Islamic State for more than a decade.

According to a recent OECD report, “70 percent of violent events and 65 percent of fatalities in North and West Africa occur within just one kilometer (0.6 mile) of a road.”
In the central Sahel — as well as the Lake Chad basin and western Cameroon — some roads “have become epicenters of violence,” the 145-page report said, disrupting financial trade and governance.
“Transport routes have become a prime target for attacks against government forces, particularly military convoys, and a means to pressure rural communities,” said Olivier Walther, a co-author of the study, adding that jihadists regularly set up roadblocks around towns.
Road insecurity “is directly linked to the spread of jihadist insurgencies” in the region, Walther, an associate professor at the University of Florida, said.
With 433 recorded incidents since 2012, he said Mali’s National route 16 connecting Mopti in central Mali to Gao in the north, is “by far” the most dangerous transport axis.

South of the Malian border, in Burkina Faso, “all roads leading to Djibo” are dangerous “due to blockades imposed on the town” by the Al-Qaeda-affiliated Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims (JNIM), Walther said.
National route 22 that connects Bourzanga, Djibo and the capital Ouagadougou has been nicknamed “the death corridor” due to the frequency of deadly jihadist attacks.
In September 2022, jihadists burned over 200 supply trucks on the Bourzanga-Djibo section, killing 11 soldiers and civilian volunteers supporting the army, with numerous civilians missing.
A few months later, Abdoul Fhatave Tiemtore, editor-in-chief of the Burkinabe radio station Omega, wrote about his experience of traveling that section of road.
He described feeling “sadness, anxiety, fear and stress” after witnessing “truly horrific things.”
“We saw bodies that were still fresh, decaying bodies, abandoned vehicles and craters from mines on the road,” Tiemtore wrote in an article.

Niger has two high-risk highways, both in the southwest and both leading to Burkina Faso.
Since 2022, it has been nearly impossible to travel from the capital Niamey to Burkina’s Ouagadougou by road due to the threat posed by jihadists along the 600-kilometer (373-mile) border between the two countries.
The National Association of Wood Operators in Niger told AFP in May that it had lost 24 of its drivers and apprentices since 2015 and that 52 of its trucks had been burnt on roads in the southwest of the country.
“We are tired of counting our dead,” another Nigerien truck drivers’ union said, with several of its members, drivers and apprentices also killed in attacks.
“The terrorists have banned us from traveling to local fairs, they even held some drivers hostage in the bush for days,” said Zakaria Seyni, a Nigerien driver based in the tri-border region shared by Niger, Burkina and Mali — a hotspot for jihadist attacks.
According to the OECD, security measures in the Sahel must be accompanied by the development of transportation infrastructure, cross-border cooperation and economic integration to promote stability.
The scarcity of roads and their poor condition have forced armies in the region to travel in convoys, leaving rural areas to jihadists, Walther said.
An alternative would be to rethink the way armies move around, using for instance “vehicles as light and versatile as those of jihadists,” such as motorcycles, he said.


The strange case of Evgeniya Mayboroda, Russia’s rebel retiree

Updated 22 sec ago

The strange case of Evgeniya Mayboroda, Russia’s rebel retiree

The strange case of Evgeniya Mayboroda, Russia’s rebel retiree
WARSAW: The elegant 72-year-old Russian put her hand on her heart as the verdict fell. Five and a half years in prison for posts opposing the war in Ukraine.
Then, according to a witness who saw her in the dock, “her nose began to bleed.”
Yet only a few years before, Evgeniya Mayboroda had been an ardent fan of Russian leader Vladimir Putin and had celebrated his annexation of Crimea.
A photo taken in the court in Shakhty shows her shock as the sentence was pronounced — her punishment held up as an example of what can happen to even model citizens if they question the war.
Mayboroda — who comes from the Rostov region bordering Ukraine — was accused of sharing “false information” on the Russian army on social media and of “making a public appeal to commit extremist activities.”
Even before she was convicted in January 2024, the posts on her social media feed — thick with pictures of cats and flowers — had put her on the Russia’s “terrorist and extremist” watchlist.
Curious to discover how a pro-Kremlin pensioner could so quickly become an enemy of the state, AFP tracked her down to a penal colony where she said her faith and prayers were sustaining her.
We also talked to those who know her and were able to piece together a picture of this unlikely rebel, whose strange story says much about today’s Russia.


Evgeniya Nikolaevna Mayboroda was born on June 10, 1951 near the coal-mining town of Shakhty and met her husband Nikolai at the local technical institute.
They both got jobs at a facility just outside the city — he was a miner in an elite squad, while she worked in the power station above ground. They had a son, Sergei, in 1972.
The Mayborodas were the ideal Soviet family. As mine workers they occupied a privileged place in the communist hierarchy and were able to travel regularly across the Eastern Bloc.
But when the USSR collapsed in 1991 so did their world. Not only was there no money to pay their wages but the socialist values they believed in were replaced by a wild, cowboy capitalism.
Then on Miners’ Day 1997, an important date in the Soviet calendar, Sergei, their only child was killed in a car accident. He was 25.
“We were at the burial. Evgeniya was in such a state that she can’t remember it,” a friend of the family, too afraid to give her name, told AFP.
“Her son was everything to her.”
The mine shut down in 2002 and, less than a decade later, her husband died after a sudden illness and Mayboroda found herself alone.


She took refuge in religion and was soon back on her feet, again taking pride in her appearance. Photos show that even on a budget, she kept her sense of style, always with a little touch of mascara.
“She is a leader in life,” a friend said. “She is hard to break.”
At the end of 2017, she discovered social media and joined VK (Russia’s equivalent to Facebook). Her page shows her political evolution.
For five years she shared hundreds of pictures of cats and flowers, religious messages or nostalgic reminiscences about life in the good old USSR.
And she was effusive in her praise of President Vladimir Putin, posting some 30 photos of him from March to August 2018, hailing him as a marvellous leader who was making Russia great again.
In one of them, Putin tells Donald Trump that Russia would give Crimea back to Ukraine “if the United States gives Texas back to Mexico and Alaska back to Russia.”
She also called former Ukrainian leader Petro Poroshenko — who accused Putin of having him poisoned — a “moron.”
Like many Russians laid low by the crisis of the 1990s, Mayboroda was receptive to the Kremlin’s rhetoric that Russia had regained its power and stability under Putin.


Then something changed. In the summer of 2018, a sudden raising of the retirement age saw discontent with the government spread beyond the big cities.
“Normally Putin, as a great popular leader, likes to position himself as referee, guaranteeing the interest of the people,” said French sociologist Karine Clement, a specialist on Russian protest movements.
“But this was the first time he spoke up to defend a reform that, let’s say, went against the interests of the poor.”
While his popularity plummeted, there were no large protests.
At around the same time, the mood of Mayboroda’s posts about politics began to change.
She started to share posts denouncing poverty in Russia, contrasting it with the country’s vast natural resources.
Tatyana Vasilchuk, a journalist from the independent outlet Novaya Gazeta, said the Maiski area where Mayboroda lived was wracked by neglect and unemployment when she visited.
“It was drowning under rubbish,” she said.
In 2020, Mayboroda made clear her opposition to a change in the constitution allowing Putin to stay in power until 2036, reposting a message that said: “No to an eternal Putin... No to eternal lies and corruption.”


Then came the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
“One of the motors” for Putin going to war, Clement said, was his need to silence opposition and “restore control.”
On her VK account, Mayboroda — who had family in Ukraine — criticized the invasion and even expressed support for the Azov Brigade, a Ukrainian unit founded by far-right militants.
While some Azov members were neo-Nazis, its dogged resistance on the battlefield, particularly during the siege of Mariupol in 2022, won it hero status in Ukraine and recruits beyond ultranationalist groups.
In Russia, where all opposition — particularly online — is tracked, her posts did not go unnoticed.
The security services have locked up hundreds of people for criticizing the conflict and Mayboroda’s turn came in February 2023.
Police raided her home and she got her first jail term and a fine. A more serious criminal investigation was also opened, which led to her conviction last year.
Investigators accused her of criticizing the Russian assault on Mariupol in which thousands of besieged Ukrainians died.
They also said she reposted a disturbing video in which a young girl, sat in front of a screen showing a swastika, holds a knife and declares in Ukrainian that Russians should have their throats cut.
The video seems to support the Kremlin line that Russia had gone into Ukraine to fight “neo-Nazis,” playing on the admiration some Ukrainian nationalist groups have for those who fought with the Germans against Soviet leader Joseph Stalin during World War II.
Mayboroda was accused of being a Nazi for reposting the video, which had in fact been published by a pro-Kremlin account on VK. Ukraine’s SBU security service claim the clip was part of a Russian “propaganda campaign.”
“She does not support that ideology,” a source close to the case told AFP.
Mayboroda, who regularly crossed the border to visit her Ukrainian relatives before the war, told the court that one was wounded in a Russian strike on a building in Dnipro in the summer of 2022.


Yet at the time Mayboroda did not see how dangerous her online comments were, a friend told AFP. She compared the pensioner — who is now 74 — to a “lost lamb” who she still loved despite being “in the wrong.”
Expert Clement said she could understand how Mayboroda became politicized once she saw through the Kremlin line.
Beyond prosecuting its opponents, the Kremlin tries to “scramble minds” with a fog of often contradictory disinformation to stop “the forming of mass political movements,” Clement said.
This strategy of confusion allows it to present the invasion as “a fight against Nazism,” she added, even though Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is Jewish.
Russians are cynical about politics after watching oligarchs present their ultraliberal reforms that robbed the poor in the 1990s as an advance toward “democracy,” the expert argued, a distrust which now works in favor of Putin’s authoritarianism.
“You have to be very smart to navigate public life in Russia,” she said, adding that a “thirst for community” was part of the reason why so many have got behind the war.
Despite that, Mayboroda’s plight has garnered attention from opposition media and NGOs both in Russia and in exile. The banned group Memorial quickly recognized her as a “political prisoner,” and Kremlin critics said her jailing showed the growing intensity of repression.



Unlike thousands of Ukrainian prisoners who human rights groups say are being held in secret and sometimes tortured, as a Russian citizen Mayboroda’s prison conditions are much better.
Theoretically she can receive letters, though censored by prison authorities, and occasionally make phone calls.
In June, after a six-month wait, AFP was able to talk to her during a mediated and recorded 10-minute call from her prison in the Rostov region.
During the spring her friends said she was depressed and unwell. But her tone during this call was surprisingly upbeat given she has been behind bars for 18 months.
“The hardest thing for me was losing my freedom. It’s very hard... But my faith and prayers help me,” she told AFP, her voice sometimes cut by the crackly line.
Asked why she reshared the video of the girl calling for Russians to be killed, she said “it happened by accident. It was stupid.”
She insisted that she detested “hate” and “lies,” and that she believed in “love and the joy of living.”
Her opposition to the war was on simple moral grounds, she said. “I am a (Christian) believer. Thou shalt not kill.”
Nor could she see why the invasion had to happen. “Why all this? I don’t understand.”

Confidence vote spells scrutiny, if little danger, for EU chief

Confidence vote spells scrutiny, if little danger, for EU chief
Updated 10 min 32 sec ago

Confidence vote spells scrutiny, if little danger, for EU chief

Confidence vote spells scrutiny, if little danger, for EU chief
  • The confidence vote was initiated by a Romanian far right lawmaker, Gheorghe Piperea, who accuses von der Leyen of a lack of transparency over text messages she sent to the head of Pfizer while negotiating Covid vaccines

BRUSSELS: EU chief Ursula von der Leyen faces a grilling from lawmakers Monday ahead of a confidence vote she is all but certain to survive — but which casts renewed scrutiny on her leadership of the bloc.
The rare challenge pushed by a faction on the far-right has virtually no chance of unseating the conservative European Commission president when it goes to a vote Thursday in Strasbourg.
But Monday’s debate will give von der Leyen’s opponents from across the spectrum a chance to flex their muscles in the bloc’s assembly, one year after EU-wide elections.
The confidence vote was initiated by a Romanian far-right lawmaker, Gheorghe Piperea, who accuses von der Leyen of a lack of transparency over text messages she sent to the head of Pfizer while negotiating Covid vaccines.
The commission’s failure to release the messages — the focus of multiple court cases including by The New York Times — has given weight to critics who accuse its boss of centralized and opaque decision-making.
That is a growing refrain from von der Leyen’s traditional allies on the left and center, who also have bones to pick over the new status quo in parliament — where her center-right camp has increasingly teamed up with the far-right to further its agenda.


“Pfizergate” aside, Romania’s Piperea also accuses the European Commission of interfering in his country’s recent presidential election, which saw the EU critic and nationalist George Simion lose to pro-European Nicusor Dan.
The vote came after Romania’s constitutional court scrapped an initial ballot over allegations of Russian interference and massive social media promotion of the far-right frontrunner, who was barred from standing again.
The EU opened a formal probe into TikTok after the canceled vote.
Piperea’s challenge to von der Leyen has support from part of the far-right — including the Patriots for Europe group that includes both France’s National Rally and the party of Hungary’s nationalist Prime Minister Viktor Orban.
The vote was set last week after the motion gathered the minimum 72 signatures — one-tenth of the 720-seat legislature, where von der Leyen was re-elected with 401 votes last July.
Parliament’s biggest force, von der Leyen’s European People’s Party (EPP) flatly rejects the challenge to the commission chief — with group boss Manfred Weber branding it the work of pro-Russian, anti-European forces in the assembly.
Russian President Vladimir “Putin’s puppets in the European Parliament are trying to undermine Europe’s unity and bring the commission down in times of global turmoil and economic crisis,” he charged.
“It’s a disgrace for the European people.”
On the left and center, there is no question of backing the censure motion.
But both camps want to push von der Leyen to clarify her allegiances — accusing her of cosying up to the far-right to push through contested measures, and most notably to roll back environmental rules.
“We are going to ask the EPP, clearly, who it wants to work with,” said the centrist leader Valerie Hayer.
“Is it still with us, the pro-European groups — or with the ECR and Patriots who are trying to bring down the EPP commission chief — and with it a vision of Europe that we believe in?“
The Socialists and Democrats — parliament’s second force — likewise said they had sought “clear signs of commitment” on the EPP’s priorities going forward.
“The EPP should look carefully who they want to build bridges with, us or the ones who initiate votes of censure,” the group said.
A successful vote of no-confidence would trigger the resignation of von der Leyen’s 27-member European Commission in what would be a historical first.
The closest parallel dates from March 1999, when the team led by Luxembourg’s Jacques Santer resigned en masse over damning claims of corruption and mismanagement rather than face a confidence vote it was set to lose.


French police are slashing migrant boats but they’re still determined to reach the UK

French police are slashing migrant boats but they’re still determined to reach the UK
Updated 31 min 44 sec ago

French police are slashing migrant boats but they’re still determined to reach the UK

French police are slashing migrant boats but they’re still determined to reach the UK
  • France is defending beaches with increasing aggression against migrants trying at a record pace to go the other way

ECAULT BEACH: Across the English Channel, the white cliffs of the U.K beckon. On fine days, men and women with children in their arms and determination in their eyes can see the shoreline of what they believe will be a promised land as they attempt the perilous crossing clandestinely, ditching belongings to squeeze aboard flimsy inflatable boats that set to sea from northern France.
In a flash, on one recent crossing attempt, French police swooped in with knives, wading into the water and slashing at the boat’s thin rubber — literally deflating the migrants’ hopes and dreams.
Some of the men put up dispirited resistance, trying to position themselves — in vain — between the boat and the officers’ blades. One splashed water at them, another hurled a shoe. Cries of “No! No!” rang out. A woman wailed.
But the team of three officers, one also holding a pepper-gas canister, lunged at the boat again and again, pitching some of those aboard into the surf as it quickly deflated. The Associated Press obtained video of the police boat-slashing, filmed on a beach near the French port of Boulogne.
Growing numbers are getting through France’s defenses
France’s northern coast has long been fortified against invasion, with Nazi bunkers in World War II and pre-French Revolution forts. Now, France is defending beaches with increasing aggression against migrants trying at a record pace to go the other way — out to sea, to the UK
Under pressure from UK authorities, France’s government is preparing to give an even freer hand to police patrols that, just last week, were twice filmed slashing boats carrying men, women and children.
The video obtained by AP was filmed Monday. Four days later, on Écault beach south of Boulogne, the BBC filmed police wading into the surf and slashing another boat with box cutters, again pitching people into the water as it deflated.
An AP journalist who arrived moments later counted multiple lacerations and saw dispirited people, some still wearing life jackets, clambering back up sand dunes toward woods inland. There, AP had spent the previous night with families and men waiting for a crossing, sleeping rough in a makeshift camp without running water or other basic facilities. Exhausted children cried as men sang songs and smoked around a campfire.
The French Interior Ministry told AP that police haven’t been issued orders to systematically slash boats. But the British government — which is partly funding France’s policing efforts — welcomed what it called a “toughening” of the French approach. The UK is also pushing France to go further and let officers intervene against boats in deeper waters, a change the government in Paris is considering. Campaigners for migrant rights and a police union warn that doing so could endanger both migrants and officers.
Of the slashing filmed Friday by the BBC, the Interior Ministry said the boat was in distress, overloaded and riding low in the water, with migrants “trying to climb aboard from the back, risking being caught by the propeller.”
“The gendarmes, in water up to their knees, intervened to rescue people in danger, pull the boat to shore and neutralize it,” the ministry said.
For migrants, boat-slashing is infuriating
Around the campfire, the men stared into the flames and ruminated. Deniz, a Kurd with an infectious laugh and a deep singing voice, wanted more than anything to cross the channel in time to celebrate his 44th birthday in August with his 6-year-old daughter, Eden, who lives with her mother in the UK Like nearly all the migrating people that AP interviewed, surviving in camps that police frequently dismantle, Deniz didn’t want to give his full name.
Refused a short-stay UK visa, Deniz said he had no other option than the sea route, but four attempts ended with police wrecking the boats. He said that on one of those occasions, his group of around 40 people begged an officer patrolling alone to turn a blind eye and let them take to sea.
“He said, ‘No,’ nobody going to stop him. We could stop him, but we didn’t want, you know, to hurt him or we didn’t want to argue with him,” Deniz said. “We just let him, and he cut it with a knife.”
He believes that UK funding of French policing is turning officers into zealots.
“I say, ‘Because of the money, you are not France soldiers, you’re not France police. You are the English dogs now,” he said.
The cat-and-mouse between migrants and police
The coastal battle between police and migrants never lets up, no matter the hour or weather. Drones and aircraft watch the beaches and gendarmes patrol them aboard buggies and on foot. On Écault beach, a WWII gun emplacement serves as their lookout post.
Inland waterways have been sealed off with razor wire and floating barriers to prevent launches of so-called “taxi boats.” They motor to offshore pickup points, where waiting migrants then wade into the sea and climb aboard, children in their arms and on their shoulders.
AP saw a 6 a.m. pickup Friday on Hardelot beach south of Boulogne. Many dozens of people squeezed aboard, straddling the sausage-like inflated sides — one foot in the sea, the other in the boat. It left about a half-dozen people on the beach, some in the water, apparently because there was no more room. Gendarmes on the beach watched it motor slowly away.
Campaigners who work with migrants fear that allowing police to intervene against boats farther offshore will panic those aboard, risking casualties. French officials are examining the possibility of police interventions up to 300 meters (980 feet) from the water’s edge.
“All that will happen is that people will take greater and greater risks,” said Diane Leon, who coordinates aid efforts for the group Médecins du Monde along the coast. “The police entering the water — this was something that, until now, we saw only rarely. But for us, it raises fears of panic during boarding or of boats arriving farther and farther out, forcing people to swim to reach the taxi boats.”
In an AP interview, police union official Régis Debut voiced concerns about potential legal ramifications for officers if people drown during police attempts to stop offshore departures. He said officers weighed down by equipment could also drown.
“Our colleagues don’t want to cross 300 meters to intercept the small boats. Because, in fact, we’re not trained for that,” said Debut, of the union UNSA Police.
“You also need to have the proper equipment. You can’t carry out an arrest wearing combat boots, a police uniform and the bullet-proof vest. So the whole process needs to be reconsidered.”
Migrants say crossings are atrocious but worth the risk
Around the campfire, men laughed off the risks of the crossings that French authorities say claimed nearly 80 lives last year. They had nothing left to lose and the channel was just one more hardship after tortuous journeys to France filled with difficulties and misery, they said.
“We will never give up,” Deniz said.
According to UK government figures, more than 20,000 people made the crossing in the first six months of this year, up by about 50 percent from the same period in 2024, and potentially on course toward a new annual record. About 37,000 people were detected crossing in 2024, the second-highest annual figure after 46,000 in 2022.
Qassim, a 26-year-old Palestinian, messaged AP after crossing last week with his wife and their daughters, aged 6 and 4. The boat labored through waves for eight hours, he said.
“Everyone was praying,” he wrote. “We were patient and endured and saw death. The children were crying and screaming.”
“Now we feel comfortable, safe, and stable. We are starting a new page,” he wrote. “We will do our best to protect our children and ourselves and to make up for the difficult years we have been exposed to.”


Three children among 23 wounded in Russia’s drone attack on Kharkiv, Ukraine says

Three children among 23 wounded in Russia’s drone attack on Kharkiv, Ukraine says
Updated 41 min 33 sec ago

Three children among 23 wounded in Russia’s drone attack on Kharkiv, Ukraine says

Three children among 23 wounded in Russia’s drone attack on Kharkiv, Ukraine says
  • 20 people were wounded following a Russian drone attack on Kharkiv as fires spread through residential buildings and a kindergarten

At least three children were among 20 people wounded as a result of a Russian drone attack on Ukraine’s second-largest city of Kharkiv overnight that damaged apartments and a kindergarten, Ukrainian authorities said on Monday. Kharkiv, which lies in northeastern Ukraine near the border with Russia, has been the target of regular Russian drone and missile attacks since the start of the war that Moscow launched with a full-scale invasion more than three years ago.
A fire broke out in a multi-story residential building in Kharkiv as a result of the attack, Mayor Ihor Terekhov said.
Oleh Sinehubov, governor of the broader Kharkiv region of which the city of Kharkiv is the administrative center, said that most of the injuries occurred in the city’s Shevchenkivskyi district.
Emergency services were working at the site, Sinehubov said on the Telegram messaging app.
The full scale of the attack was not immediately clear. There was no comment on the attacks from Moscow. Both sides deny targeting civilians in the war. But thousands of civilians have died in the conflict, the vast majority of them Ukrainian.
A Russian attack on the region of Sumy, also in Ukraine’s northeast, on Sunday afternoon killed two people and injured another two, while damaging about 20 buildings, State Emergency Service of Ukraine said on Telegram.
An overnight attack damaged several buildings and cars in three of the 10 districts of the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv, Mayor Vitali Klitschko said on Telegram. There were no reports of injuries, he added.


Vietnam apartment block fire kills eight

Vietnam apartment block fire kills eight
Updated 07 July 2025

Vietnam apartment block fire kills eight

Vietnam apartment block fire kills eight
  • Eight people were killed in a fire that spread through an apartment block, authorities said the cause is still under investigation

HANOI: A blaze that tore through an apartment block in Vietnam’s southern business hub of Ho Chi Minh City killed eight people, including two children, local authorities said Monday.
The fire was sparked late Sunday on the ground floor of a five-story apartment block, with all eight fatalities due to smoke inhalation, Ho Chi Minh City authorities said in a statement.
Residents battled the flames with fire extinguishers as blasts were heard from inside the property, before emergency service crews arrived, according to media reports.
“There were shouts for help from the apartment. Several residents on higher floors had to jump down to escape. It was terrible,” a neighbor told the state-run Thanh Nien newspaper.
Authorities said the cause of the fire was still under investigation.
Deadly blazes have recently resulted in a string of high-profile arrests and prosecutions in Vietnam.
Eight people were jailed this year over a 2023 Hanoi apartment fire that killed 56 people, in the country’s deadliest blaze in two decades.
In December, police arrested a suspected arsonist over a karaoke bar fire in Hanoi that killed 11 people.