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  • 16
    Apr
    2013
    1:14pm, EDT

    Coup claim as 7 die in Venezuela election protests

    Isaac Urrutia / Reuters

    Supporters of opposition leader Henrique Capriles take part in a demonstration in Maracaibo on Tuesday to demand a recount of the votes in Sunday's election.

    By Brian Ellsworth and Andrew Cawthorne, Reuters

    CARACAS, Venezuela – Seven people were killed in violent clashes at opposition protests over Venezuela's disputed presidential election, officials said on Tuesday.

    President-elect Nicolas Maduro – the late Hugo Chavez’s hand-picked successor -- said on Tuesday that opposition leaders who called for protests were seeking a coup against his government.

    Opposition leader Henrique Capriles has demanded a full recount of votes from Sunday's election after results showed a narrow victory for Maduro.

    The election authority has ruled out a recount, raising fears of more violence in the South American nation, which has the world's largest oil reserves.

    The deaths happened on Monday when hundreds of protesters took to the streets in various parts of the capital Caracas and other cities, blocking streets, burning tires and fighting with security forces in some cases. Officials also said 135 people were arrested in the post-election violence.

    State media and officials said the fatalities included two people shot by opposition sympathizers while celebrating Maduro's victory in a middle-class area of Caracas.

    One person died in an attack on a government-run clinic in a central state. Two, including a policeman, were killed in an Andean border state, officials said.

    "We will defeat this violent fascism with democracy," said Foreign Minister Elias Jaua, describing incidents and showing video footage to a group of ambassadors. "Those who attempt to take with force what they could not acquire through elections are not democrats."

    There was no immediate response from the opposition, and Capriles' camp reiterated demands for peaceful protests on Tuesday as thousands of his supporters marched to regional election offices around the country. The government held counter-demonstrations. 

    Related:

    PhotoBlog: Venezuelan rivals rally after angry clashes

    Major challenges face Venezuela's next leader - whoever he is

    Venezuela divided: Recount sought after razor-thin victory of Chavez successor

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    109 comments

    Typical of a Chavez Henchman, Blame everything on either foreign nation(s) or coup attempts, even when there are legitimate protests.

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    Explore related topics: venezuela, election, protests, hugo-chavez, coup, featured, nicolas-maduro, henrique-capriles
  • 27
    Mar
    2013
    9:29am, EDT

    Sia Kambou / AFP - Getty Images

    Rebels of the Seleka coalition arrest a man, who was wearing military fatigues and claiming to belong to the Seleka movement, suspected of looting a house in Bangui, Central African Republic, on March 26, 2013.

    Looters, gunmen roam Central African Republic capital after coup

    By Ange Aboa, Reuters

    Looters and gunmen roamed the streets of Central African Republic's capital Bangui on Tuesday as rebels and regional peacekeepers struggled to restore order two days after a coup plunged the mineral-rich country into chaos.

    The ousting of President Francois Bozize and the political turmoil around it has raised fears of a humanitarian crisis in the former French colony - and embarrassed regional power South Africa which had sent troops to defend the government.

    About 5,000 Seleka rebel fighters poured into the capital on Sunday, brushing aside a 400-strong South African force which attempted to block their path. At least 13 South African soldiers were killed and 27 wounded. Read the full story.

    Agence France-Presse Correspondent's Blog: 'Zero tolerance' for looters in Bangui

    22 comments

    One more example of the rich tapestry of the African continent.

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    Explore related topics: africa, looting, coup, central-african-republic, bangui
  • 7
    Dec
    2012
    10:51pm, EST

    Honduras president warns a coup is brewing, in echo of 2009 crisis

    Stringer / Reuters

    Honduras President Porfirio Lobo speaks during a news conference at the Francisco Morazan Military Academy in Tegucigalpa on Friday. Lobo asserted that there is a conspiracy brewing against him that could mimic the coup that removed former president Manuel Zelaya in 2009.

    By The Associated Press

    Honduras' president on Friday accused a group led by a powerful publishing magnate of plotting to repeat "the crisis of 2009," when his predecessor, Manuel Zelaya, was whisked out of the country at gunpoint in a civilian coup.  

    President Porfirio Lobo, speaking at a military event, did not use the word coup, but referred several times to the June 2009 incident that caused a political and economic crisis in this Central American country that in many ways has still not been resolved.  

    Both drug trafficking and killing have risen since then in Honduras, where two-thirds of the 8.2 million people live in poverty. With a homicide rate of 91 per 100,000 residents, it is often called the most violent country in the world.


    Lobo said he knows who is meeting and how, though he did not say why they were conspiring or whether they were planning to overthrow his government. Lobo has accused groups in the past of plotting against him without providing details.  


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    "What they're doing is a danger to the country," he said. "These citizens have not learned. We had a crisis in 2009 and they want to repeat it in 2012."

    Gen. Rene Osorio, chief of the armed forces, appeared with Lobo, saying he supports the president. He said he has provided Lobo with intelligence reports but said they are confidential.

    "In the armed forces, no one is thinking about a coup d'etat," Osorio said. "We will continue to inform the president with investigation and intelligence to give him our support."

    In 2009, the populist-leaning Zelaya was seized at gunpoint by soldiers and flown out of the country in a coup that had wide support among the political elites, including members of Zelaya's own political party.

    Zelaya, who lived in exile but has since returned and formed his own political party, expressed support for Lobo on Friday.

    "In Honduras, we have a dictatorship by the oligarchy," he said.

    A rich landowner like Lobo, Zelaya angered the business elite that had run Honduras for decades with a campaign to rewrite the constitution, promising the poor they would get a voice in shaping the future of the country. He also closely aligned himself with leftist Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.

    Zelaya was deposed when he ignored a Supreme Court order to cancel a referendum on his grandiose plan.

    Lobo was democratically elected in a previously scheduled election later that year and took office in January 2010.

    He has been at odds with the same Supreme Court that supported Zelaya's ouster. The court shot down Lobo's plans to build private cities as a means of attracting investment and economic development. The Supreme Court next week is also expected to reject Lobo's plan to clean up the corrupt Honduran national police, which are often involved in killings and organized crime.  

    Lobo said the leader of the conspiracy is Jorge Canahuati, owner of Grupo Opsa, which publishes El Heraldo and La Prensa, the country's two largest daily newspapers.

    Canahuati denied any involvement in a statement published on his newspapers' websites. It called Lobo's comments reckless, unfounded and intimidating and said they are "endangering freedom of expression."

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    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    8 comments

    The murder rate in Detroit is 124 per 100,000. That makes Honduras about fifth on the list behind Venezuela, Afghanistan and Pakistan.

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    Explore related topics: latin-america, honduras, manuel-zelaya, coup, tegucigalpa, porfirio-lobo
  • 26
    Nov
    2012
    6:21am, EST

    Report: Body of former Turkish leader shows signs of poisoning

    Fatih Saribas / Reuters, file

    Turkish President Turgut Ozal, seen here in January 1993, died of heart failure in 1993. Recent tests on his exhumed body revealed evidence of poisoning, a newspaper reported Monday.

    By Reuters

    ISTANBUL — An autopsy on the exhumed body late President Turgut Ozal, who led Turkey out of military rule in the 1980s, has revealed evidence of poisoning, a Turkish newspaper reported Monday.

    There had long been rumors that Ozal, who died of heart failure in 1993 at the age of 65, was murdered by militants of the "deep state" — a shadowy nationalist strain within the Turkish establishment of the day. He had angered some with his efforts to end the Kurdish conflict and survived an assassination bid in 1988.

    His body, dug up last month on the orders of prosecutors investigating suspicions of foul play in his death, contained the banned insecticide DDT and the related compound DDE at ten times the normal level, Today's Zaman cited sources from the state Forensic Medicine Institute as saying.


     

    More news from Europe on NBCNews.com

    "Ozal was most likely poisoned with four separate substances," the paper reported the sources as saying, also naming the toxic metal cadmium and the radioactive elements americium and polonium as substances found in Ozal's remains.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Forensic institute officials declined to comment.

    Dominant figure in Turkish politics in 1980s
    Ozal, whose economic reforms easing the grip of the state on business helped shape modern Turkey, was in poor health. After undergoing a triple heart bypass operation in the United States in 1987, he kept up a grueling schedule and remained overweight until he died.

    His moves to end a Kurdish insurgency and create a Turkic union with central Asian states have been cited as motives for would-be enemies in "deep state," in which security establishment figures and criminal elements colluded.

    It was Turkey's military leaders who appointed him as a minister after a period of military rule following a 1980 coup.

    He went on to dominate Turkish politics as prime minister from 1983 to 1989. Parliament then elected him president, but those close to him believe his reform efforts displeased some in the security establishment.

    While prime minister, Ozal survived an assassination attempt by a right-wing gunman in 1988 when he was shot at a party congress, injuring a finger.

    Watch World News videos on NBCNews.com

    Frequent coups
    Turkish political history has been littered with military coups, alleged anti-government plots and extra-judicial killings. A court is currently trying hundreds of people suspected of links to a nationalist underground network known as "Ergenekon" accused of plotting to overthrow the government.

    A media report at the start of November said Ozal's autopsy had revealed high levels of the pesticide strychnine, but the ATK subsequently denied the report.

    The head of the Forensic Medicine Institute has said it aims to complete its work in December and that its report would be handed over to prosecutors.

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    13 comments

    All those poisons were readily available from the KGB, and Russia was very helpful when terrorist operatives wanted to rid themselves of any public figure the KGB did not also like. You also can't rule out ricin.

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    Explore related topics: turkey, europe, coup, poison, featured, ozal
  • 22
    Sep
    2012
    5:03am, EDT

    Turkey sentences 322 military officers to jail over 'Sledgehammer' coup plot

    By Ece Toksabay, Reuters

    SILIVRI, Turkey -- A Turkish court sentenced more than 300 military officers to jail on Friday for plotting to overthrow Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan almost a decade ago, ending a trial that underscored civilian dominance over the once all-powerful military.

    The court in Silivri, just west of Istanbul, handed prison terms to 322 serving and retired army officers and acquitted 34, according to court documents seen by Reuters.

    Two retired generals and a retired admiral considered the ringleaders of the so-called "Sledgehammer" plot to topple Erdogan in 2003 were given life terms. Their relatives collapsed in tears in the courtroom as the sentences were handed down.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The military has long been the guardian of Turkey's secular establishment, launching three coups between 1960 and 1980 and pressuring an Islamist-led government to quit in 1997.

    But Erdogan's Islamist-rooted AK Party, which came to power a decade ago, has tamed military influence over policy-making and ministerial appointments as part of efforts to strengthen democracy, while prosecutors have pursued suspected coup-makers through the courts.

    "To comment without seeing the reasons for the verdict would be inappropriate. There is an appeals process. What is important for us is that the right decision emerges," Erdogan told reporters in Ankara, as the sentences were being announced.

    The ruling has the potential to undermine morale in the military as it battles Kurdish militants in the southeast and faces a growing challenge maintaining security along its southern border with war-torn Syria.

    Turkey sends military convoys toward Syrian border

    "Turkish soldiers are not just being struck down in Diyarbakir, Sirnak and Bingol, it is actually here where they have been hit," said Colonel Mustafa Onsel, one of the defendants, referring to three southeastern provinces which have seen clashes with Kurdish militants in recent months.

    The court said the three sentenced to life would in fact only serve 20 years because they were unsuccessful in their bid to topple the government.

    Motivated by revenge?
    The "Sledgehammer" conspiracy is alleged to have included plans to bomb historic mosques in Istanbul and trigger conflict with Greece to pave the way for an army takeover.

    Prosecutors had demanded 15 to 20-year jail sentences for the 365 defendants, 364 of whom were serving or retired officers.

    Everyday more wounded Syrian rebels are brought in to Turkey and treated in border hospitals run by Syrian doctors and volunteers. Medical supplies are in short supply and the hospitals underequipped. NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports. 

    Those sentenced to life included retired generals Cetin Dogan and Halil Ibrahim Firtina, and retired admiral Ozden Ornek, considered the ringleaders of the plot.

    Those sentenced to 18-year terms included Engin Alan, a retired general elected to parliament as a member of the National Movement Party last year, and Bilgin Baranli, who had been in line to become Air Force commander before his arrest last year.

    Sledgehammer is one of a series of trials that has sparked criticism that the government is using the courts to silence political opponents.

    Others include the "Ergenekon" case, which involves a web of alleged plots against Turkey's government.

    Thousands of people, including journalists, lawyers and politicians, are in jail pending verdicts in trials that human rights groups say raise questions about Turkey's commitment to democratic rights.

    Dogan's daughter Pinar Dogan, a lecturer at Harvard University, said her family believed the case was aimed at settling old scores and pointed to reports by experts who said computer documents submitted as evidence appeared doctored.

    "Going after those perceived as opposed to this government because of its Islamist leaning is motivated in part by revenge. My father was a retired man with no political clout left," she said.

    Turkey: Syria shot down our warplane

    "He had no sympathy for this government, but he would never have bombed mosques or shot down planes, never."

    The Turkish military is NATO's second-biggest standing force after the United States. Its main domestic challenge has been militants from the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), considered a terrorist group by Ankara, the United States and European Union.

    The past few months have seen some of the heaviest fighting since the PKK took up arms in 1984 with the aim of carving out a Kurdish state. Turkish troops are also serving in Afghanistan, Northern Cyprus and Lebanon as well as at small observation posts set up in the 1990s in Iraq.

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    54 comments

    @ doug; This is their "Democracy" Doug. The problem is the same as ME(Arab spring countries)) are having, they are voting in more tied to Islamist,there is no secular establishment,maybe under a guise but that is it. The people of these countries are not voting in people that will grow the rule of  …

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    Explore related topics: turkey, europe, plot, jail, military, coup, featured, tayyip-erdogan, crime-and-courts
  • 17
    Apr
    2012
    12:34pm, EDT

    Microsoft Africa chairman named interim leader of Mali

    /

    Cheick Modibo Diarra at the UNESCO headquarters in Paris, in this file photo.

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    Cheick Modibo Diarra, Microsoft Corp's chairman for Africa, has been appointed interim prime minister charged with helping to restore civilian rule to the Saharan state of Mali after a coup last month, it was reported Tuesday.

    The appointment of Diarra, a former NASA astrophysicist who was born in the country, was announced on in a statement read out on state television, Reuters reported.


    Follow @alastairjam

    His top priority in the impoverished West African state will be to negotiate with Tuareg and Islamist rebels as well as various criminal groups who took advantage of the coup to overrun much of the country's north, news agency Agence France-Presse reported.

    UN: Ancient treasures of Timbuktu under threat in Mali unrest

    Diarra universities in Paris and Washington and became chairman for Africa at Microsoft in 2006, according to previously-issued press release on Microsoft's website.

    Qatar-based news channel Al Jazeera reported that soldiers arrested the head of one of Mali's biggest political parties, Soumaila Cisse, on Monday. The former prime minister was also detained by military personnel, officials said.

    It reported that the arrests raised fresh questions about whether the military was still in control of the nation despite a handover of power to a civilian leader.

    It said the European Union delegation in Mali issued a statement expressing concern about the arrests, calling for "an urgent clarification and their immediate release".

    Microsoft confirmed Diarra left the company in December 2011. (Msnbc.com is a joint venture of Microsoft Corp. and NBC Universal, which is jointly owned by Comcast Corp. and General Electric.)

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    11 comments

    Sounds like he very well may be the smartest person in the country. I wish him success in the face of such adversity.

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    Explore related topics: africa, microsoft, coup, featured, mali, cheick-modibo-diarra
  • 5
    Apr
    2012
    9:02am, EDT

    Online coup rumors spark China crackdown on social media websites

    China has been shutting down internet and social media sties that have been fuelling rumors of a military coup, ITV's Angus Walker reports from Beijing.

    China's government shut down some social media websites this week after photos of tanks on the streets were posted online. The images sparked false rumors of a coup. 

    ITV News' Angus Walker reports from Beijing.

    Check out more China coverage on msnbc.com's Behind The Wall blog.

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    66 comments

    They will be here any minute. From Wikipedia:

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    Explore related topics: china, internet, web, coup, social-media, featured, angus-walker
  • 4
    Apr
    2012
    9:39pm, EDT

    British couple flee Timbuktu as town falls to al-Qaida

    By msnbc.com staff

    A British couple made a dramatic escape from Timbuktu, Mali, after the town fell to fighters linked to al-Qaida, The Daily Telegraph of London reported Wednesday.

    The newspaper said militiamen aided Neil Whitehead, 58, and Diane English, 53, in making an 850-mile desert trek to Nouakchott, the capital of Mauritania.


    The couple since 2010 operated the budget Hotel Alafia, catering to backpackers and independent travelers, until they learned al-Qaida offered to pay for their deaths, the Telegraph said.

    Read the original story in The Telegraph

    The town fell to the al-Qaida-linked fighters last weekend after a military coup left the area defenseless. The couple tried to leave Saturday but fleeing Mali soldiers blocked the roads, The Telegraph said.

    English told the Telegraph the couple ran into a firefight she called “rather alarming.”

    “We went back to the house again to keep our heads down but there was a lot of firing in the town -- it was clear a lot of people had a lot of weapons," English told the Telegraph.

    British and French diplomats helped arrange their escape through the National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad (MNLA), the main rebel group in the region, the report said. This Tuareg force helped kinfolk in Libya during that country's civil war, then returned with weapons looted from Col. Moammar Gadhafi’s abandoned armories.

    The MNLA told alleged al-Qaida members hunting for the couple that they had already left, the Telegraph said. It's not clear what the relationship between the MNLA and the al-Qaida-linked fighters is.

    After a three-day, largely sleepless excursion in old army trucks, the couple are seeking refuge in the French Embassy in Nouakchott, the Telegraph reported.

    Bing map

    A British couple reportedly fled from Timbuktu, Mali, to Nouakchott, Mauritania.

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    15 comments

    load em all up w weapons,they'll kill themselves off then we can take what we want.Ps stupid british travellers

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    Explore related topics: al-qaida, coup, mauritania, featured, mali, timbuktu
  • 2
    Apr
    2012
    1:57pm, EDT

    UN: Ancient treasures of Timbuktu under threat in Mali unrest

    EPA/Ulrike Koltermann

    A file picture shows the minaret of a clay-mosque in Timbuktu, Mali.

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

     

    Follow @alastairjam

    Cultural treasures in the ancient city of Timbuktu are under threat from the armed conflict that has gripped Mali following last month’s coup, the United Nations warned on Monday.

    Irina Bokova, director-general of the Paris-based United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), said in a blog posting that the recent takeover of the city by Tuareg rebels could damage the management and conservation of the three mosques and 16 mausoleums there, as well as well as the Tomb of Askia in another Mali city, Gao.


    She called on all sides in the political unrest to “protect these heritage treasures, to which the international community and UNESCO attach great importance," adding that they are designated World Heritage Sites.

    Control of the gold-rich west Africa nation was seized by a military junta on March 21, prompting separatist Tuareg rebels in the north of the country to take over towns and cities. They planted a flag in Timbuktu late on Sunday after a battle with the army, forcing the junta to pledge a return to civilian power.

    Bokova’s posting said Timbuktu attractions “reflect the golden age of an intellectual and spiritual capital in the fifteenth century” and “played a vital role in spreading Islam in Africa, carrying the identity and dignity of a whole people."

    A centuries-old crossroads on important trading routes, Timbuktu’s isolated position made it a global byword for remoteness and inaccessibility.

    The modern-day city is much less important, and its cultural richness is overshadowed by poverty and the environmental threat posed by desertification.

    “It is very remote and, in the current situation, not a place for tourists,” Alex Vines, an expert on Africa at British think tank Chatham House, told msnbc.com.

    However, Mali is strategically significant for western countries, including the United States, he said.

    “Prior to the coup, Mali was one of the few countries in the area with a democratic government and it has made some important progress in counter-terrorism so the US will want to see a political solution and an end to the violence,” he said.

    Amadou Sanogo, an army captain who led the coup, is reported to have pledged to reinstate the constitution and all state institutions before transferring power back to civilians via elections.

    That followed a threat by West African regional bloc ECOWAS to impose sanctions, including the potentially crippling closure of borders around the land-locked state.

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    20 comments

    Read http://www.timbuktufoundation.org and http://www.britannica.com. Timbuktu is an UNESCO World Heritage Site- it is an ancient trans-Saharan trading post -founded 1000 A>D> by Tuaregs (later after Mali became independent 1960 the Tuaregs northern region was made part of Republic of Mali.

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    Explore related topics: un, africa, culture, coup, heritage, featured, mali, timbuktu
  • 26
    Mar
    2012
    3:03pm, EDT

    US cuts off aid to Mali's government

    By msnbc.com news services

    The Obama administration has cut off American aid to the government of Mali after last week's coup by soldiers.

    State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland says U.S. humanitarian and food assistance will continue for Mali's impoverished citizens.

    Reports: Mali president 'safe,' rebels on move after coup

    But, she says, military aid and other funds directed to Mali's government have now been suspended.


    "We have now taken a decision to suspend our assistance to the government of Mali pending a resolution of the situation on the ground," Nuland told reporters. "A little more than half of our $140 million (in aid to Mali) is food assistance, so I am expecting somewhere in the neighborhood of $60-$70 million in assistance will be suspended but we'll have better numbers for you later on."

    Analysis: Mali coup shakes cocktail of instability in Sahel

    She said the U.S. was hoping democratic governance could be restored, leading to the resumption of U.S. assistance.

    Army mutineers claim they overthrew the government because it was mishandling an ethnic insurgency in northern Mali.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    18 comments

    How about cutting ALL foreign aid?

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    Explore related topics: us-state-department, coup, mali
  • 22
    Mar
    2012
    10:15pm, EDT

    Reports: Mali president 'safe,' rebels on move after coup

    Malin Palm / Reuters

    Malian soldiers and security forces gather at the offices of the state radio and television broadcaster Thursday after announcing a coup d'etat, in the capital Bamako.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    The ousted president of Mali was reported to be safe late Thursday after mutinous soldiers stormed his palace, took over state-run television and closed the western African nation’s borders.

    Mutineers calling themselves National Committee for the Reestablishment of Democracy and the Restoration of the State would not confirm the whereabouts of President Amadou Toumani Toure, Al Jazeera news agency reported.


    In a late-night interview on state television, a committee spokesman identified as Capt. Amadou Haya Sanogo said only that Toure is "doing well and is safe."

    A military source told AFP, the French news agency, that Toure fled the palace and was holed up in a military camp guarded by elite “Red Beret” paratroopers. Toure, 63, is a former paratrooper. He was due to leave the presidency after elections scheduled April 29, having already served the maximum two terms allowed by Malian law.

    Another committee spokesman, identified as Lt. Amadou Konare, also on state television, did not mention the elections but said the junta "solemnly commits to restore power to a democratically elected president as soon as national unity and territorial integrity are re-established."

    Soumeylou Boubeye Maiga, Mali's foreign minister, was among those being held by mutineers, Al Jazeera reported.

    The coup in a country earlier seen as a democratic success brought condemnation from France, which formerly held Mali as a colony, the Organization of Islamic Co-operation, the White House and United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon.

    Earlier: Coup topples 'incompetent regime'

    The mutineers said they overthrew the government because of its mishandling of an ethnic Tuareg insurgency backed by al-Qaida in the country's north that began in January after many fighters returned heavily armed from Libya, where they served in Moammar Gadhafi’s army.

    Tuareg rebels in northern Mali took advantage of confusion over the coup and pushed south to occupy positions vacated by government forces, sources said Thursday.

    A Malian officer in the northern town of Kidal said rebels had occupied the military camp in Anefis, 60 miles to the southwest.

    "The army has pulled back to Gao," a source in Timbuktu, another main town in the north, told Reuters, asking not to be named. "There is no longer any military leadership. (The rebels) will take the towns in the north," he said.

    This article includes reporting by Reuters.

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    7 comments

    The tuaregs are bandits and bandits do anything for money. A civil war in Mali is one of the most significant consequences of the Libyan conflict and will bolster terrorist groups operating in the Sahel like AQIM.

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  • 21
    Mar
    2012
    5:03pm, EDT

    Coup topples 'incompetent regime': Soldiers seize power in Mali

    Habibou Kouyate / AFP - Getty Images

    Mali soldiers gather on a Bamako street Wednesday. Scores of Malian soldiers mutinied, firing shots in the air and seizing the state broadcaster amid fury over their poorly-equipped efforts to stamp out a Tuareg insurgency in the north.

    By msnbc.com news services

    Updated at 10:47 a.m. ET: Renegade Malian soldiers went on state television on Thursday to declare they had seized power in a coup after the government's failure to quell a nomad-led rebellion in the north.

    The soldiers of the newly formed National Committee for the Restoration of Democracy and State (CNRDR) read out a brief statement after heavy weapons fire rang out around the presidential palace in the capital Bamako throughout the night.

    The United States later condemned the coup.


    "The CNRDR ... has decided to assume its responsibilities by putting an end to the incompetent regime of Amadou Toumani Toure," said Amadou Konare, spokesman for the CNRDR.

    Curfew
    "We promise to hand power back to a democratically elected president as soon as the country is reunified and its integrity is no longer threatened," said Konare, flanked by about two dozen soldiers. A subsequent statement declared an immediate curfew "until further notice."

    The statements made no reference to the whereabouts of Toure, who for the past decade has presided over one of the more stable governments in West Africa and was due in any case to step down after elections scheduled for late next month.

    A soldier at the presidential palace who asked not to be named because he feared reprisal told The Associated Press the presidential guard had failed to defend the palace against the renegade soldiers. The unidentified soldier said while the troops had seized control of the seat of government, they could not find Toure, the country's democratically elected leader.

    A statement from U.S. State Department spokesman Victoria Nuland said: "We echo the statements of the African Union, the Economic Community of West African States and other international partners denouncing these actions. We call for calm and the restoration of the civilian government under constitutional rule without delay, so that elections can proceed as scheduled.

    "We stand with the legitimately elected government of President Amadou Toumani Touré. Mali is a leading democracy in West Africa and its institutions must be respected."

    The gold- and cotton-producing nation of Mali has struggled to contain a northern rebellion launched late last year by local Tuareg nomads joined by heavily armed fellow Tuaregs returning from Libya after fighting for ousted leader Moammar Gadhafi.

    The rebellion, in which dozens have been killed and nearly 200,000 civilians have fled their homes, has added a new layer of insecurity to a region where al-Qaida allies have carried out a spate of kidnappings of Westerners and other crimes.

    It has also exposed Bamako's lack of control over the northern half of a country twice the size of France.

    The mutineers who complain they lack arms and resources to face the separatist insurgency.

    Bing map

    Mali army mutineers reportedly attack presidential palace in the capital, Bamako.

    U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called in a statement for calm and for grievances to be settled democratically.

    In a sign of spreading support for the mutiny, two military sources in the northern town of Gao confirmed the arrests of several senior officers in the town, a regional operations centre.

    Bamako was briefly paralysed last month as hundreds of Malians put up street barricades and burned tyres in the streets to protest at the government's handling of the rebellion.

    Toure, in power since 2002, has said he is planning after April elections. The former paratroop commander overthrew a dictatorship in a 1991 coup and relinquished power a year later before returning to office via the ballot box.

    'The talks went badly'
    A military source said a trigger for Wednesday's events was a visit by the defense minister to a barracks in the town of Kati about 13 miles north of Bamako.

    "The minister went to speak to troops but the talks went badly and people were complaining about the handling of the crisis in the north," the source said.

    A defense ministry official who was at the meeting said a soldier accused the defense minister of betraying them by not giving them means to fight the rebels. Soldiers then began throwing rocks at the minister before taking weapons from the armory and shooting in the air.

    Tuareg fighters seeking to carve out a desert homeland in Mali's north have made advances in recent weeks, including the seizure this month of the key garrison town of Tessalit by the Algerian border.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    47 comments

    Note to self: Scratch Mali off the list of potential vacation spots for 2012.

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    Explore related topics: rebellion, coup, featured, mali, bamako, taureg
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