• MSN
  • Hotmail
  • More
    • Autos
    • My MSN
    • Video
    • Careers & Jobs
    • Personals
    • Weather
    • Delish
    • Quotes
    • White Pages
    • Games
    • Real Estate
    • Wonderwall
    • Horoscopes
    • Shopping
    • Yellow Pages
    • Local Edition
    • Traffic
    • Feedback
    • Maps & Directions
    • Travel
    • Full MSN Index
  • Bing
  • NBCNews.com
  • TODAY
  • Nightly News
  • Rock Center
  • Meet the Press
  • Dateline
  • msnbc
  • Breaking News
  • Newsvine
  • Home
  • US
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Tech
  • Science
  • Travel
  • Local
  • Weather
Advertise | AdChoices
  • Recommended: In Syria, 'winning' is a relative term
  • Recommended: Palestinian kids swept up in wave of Israeli arrests
  • Recommended: Report: Iran hangs 2 alleged spies working for Israel, US
  • Recommended: 'Eternal' delays to airport, billion-dollar concert hall hit German reputation for efficiency

First for breaking news and analysis: Compelling world news stories from NBC News journalists. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

  • ↓ About this blog
  • ↓ Archives
    • Icons Email E-mail updates
    • Icons Twitter Follow on Twitter
    • Icons Feed Subscribe to RSS
  • 30
    Jan
    2013
    9:39am, EST

    French troops enter last Islamist stronghold in northern Mali

    Three weeks after French troops began their assault on northern Mali, Timbuktu is no longer controlled by an extremist group linked to al-Qaida. NBC's Rohit Kachroo reports.

    By Richard Valdmanis, Reuters

    DOUENTZA, Mali — French troops took control on Wednesday of the airport of Mali's northeast town of Kidal, the last urban stronghold held by Islamist rebels, as they moved to wrap up the first phase of a military operation to wrest northern Mali from rebel hands.

    A three-week ground and air offensive by French forces aimed at initially ending a 10-month Islamist rebel occupation of major towns is expected to eventually hand over to a larger African force.


    The Africans' task will be rooting out insurgents hiding in the desert and mountains near Algeria's border.

    After liberating the cities of Gao and Timbuktu, French forces have now taken control of the airport of Kidal, the last remaining northern urban stronghold in the hands of the Islamist militias in Mali. In Gao the brutal and distressing stories of those who fell  victim to the Jihadists harsh system of Islamic law are emerging. Lindsey Hilsum Channel Four Europe reports.

    "They (the French) arrived late last night and deployed in four planes and some helicopters," Haminy Belco Maiga, president of Kidal's regional assembly of Kidal, told Reuters.

    However, the deployment of French troops to remote Kidal puts them in direct contact with pro-autonomy Tuareg MNLA rebels operating there.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The Tuaregs, whose separatist rebellion last year was hijacked by the Islamist radicals, say they are ready to fight al-Qaida, but many Malians blame them for triggering the collapse of democracy and division with their northern revolt.

    France's military operation in its former West African colony involves around 3,500 troops on the ground backed by warplanes, helicopters and armored vehicles. It is aimed at heading off the risk of Mali being used as a springboard for jihadist attacks in the wider region or Europe.

    French and Malian troops retook the major Saharan trading towns of Gao and Timbuktu at the weekend.

    There were fears that many thousands of priceless ancient manuscripts held in Timbuktu, a UNESCO World Heritage site, might have been lost during the rebel occupation, but experts said the bulk of the texts were safe.

    The United States and European governments strongly support the Mali intervention and are providing logistical and surveillance backing but do not intend to send combat troops.

    The MNLA rebels, who want greater autonomy for the desert north, said they had moved fighters into Kidal after Islamists left the town earlier this week.

    "For the moment, there is a coordination with the French troops," said Moussa Ag Assarid, the MNLA spokesman in Paris.

    There were no reports of Malian government troops being in the town.

    The MNLA took up arms against the Bamako government a year ago, seeking to carve out a new independent desert state.

    Kambou Sia / AFP - Getty Images

    People cheer as soldiers of Malian Col. Alaji Ag Gamou enter on Jan. 29, in Ansongo, a town south of the northern Malian city of Gao. Troops from Niger and Mali entered Ansongo on Jan. 29, which along with Gao was recaptured by French-led soldiers over the weekend in a lightning offensive against radicals holding Mali's north.

    After initially fighting alongside the Islamists, by June they had been forced out by their better armed and financed former allies, who include al-Qaida North Africa's wing, AQIM, a splinter wing called MUJWA and Ansar Dine, a Malian group.

    Risk of attacks, kidnappings
    But as the French wind up the successful first phase of their offensive, doubts remain about just how quickly the U.N.-backed African intervention force, known as AFISMA and now expected to exceed 8,000 troops, can be fully deployed in Mali to hunt down the retreating al-Qaida-allied insurgents.

    French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said the French military operation, codenamed Serval (Wildcat), was planned to be a lightning mission that would last just a few weeks to avoid getting bogged down.

    "Liberating Gao and Timbuktu very quickly was part of the plan. Now it's up to the African countries to take over," he told the Le Parisien daily. "We decided to put in the means and the necessary number of soldiers to strike hard. But the French contingent will not stay like this. We will leave very quickly."

    Fabius warned that things could now get more difficult, as the offensive seeks to flush out insurgents with experience of fighting in the desert from their wilderness hideouts.

    "We have to be careful. We are entering a complicated phase where the risks of attacks or kidnappings are extremely high. French interests are threatened throughout the entire Sahel."

    An attack on the In Amenas gas plant in Algeria earlier this month by Islamist fighters opposing the French intervention in Mali led to the deaths of dozens of foreign hostages and raised fears of similar reprisal strikes across North and West Africa.

    Need for reconciliation
    While the French operation has made destroying Islamist fighters, positions and assets with air strikes a priority, analysts say a long term solution for Mali hinges on finding a politicalsettlement between the northern communities and the southern capital Bamako.

    Interim President Dioncounda Traore said on Tuesday his government would aim to hold national elections on July 31.

    After months of being kept on the political sidelines, the MNLA said they were in contact with West African mediators who are trying to forge a national settlement to reunite Mali.

    "We reiterate that we are ready to talk with Bamako and to find a political solution. We want self-determination, but all that will be up to negotiations which will determine at what level both parties can go," Ag Assarid said.

    However, there have been cases in Gao and Timbuktu and other recaptured towns of reprisal attacks and looting of shops and residences belonging to Malian Tuaregs and Arabs suspected of sympathizing with the MNLA and the Islamist rebels.

    France has called for international observers to be deployed to ensure human rights abuses are not committed.

    "Reconciling the Tuaregs with their Malian co-citizens will be extremely complicated," said Francois Heisbourg, a special adviser at the Foundation for Strategic Research, a Paris-based think-tank.

    Related:

    French-led forces in Mali seal off Timbuktu; rebels torch ancient library

    'We were so terrified': Jihadists leave trail of destruction, brutality in Mali town

    Why France is taking on Mali extremists

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    22 comments

    GO FRENCH GO! GO FRENCH GO! You are doing what the U.S. cannot do. If we went in we would want to talk to the Islamists about their feelings and rebuild all their roads and build them universities only to have the crazies blow it all up again . You French are doing it right!!! YEA!!!!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: france, al-qaida, islamist, featured, mali, timbuktu, tuareg, kidal
  • 17
    Jan
    2013
    7:39pm, EST

    Violence in Mali, Algeria raises fresh fear of radical Islam

    By Becky Bratu, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The hostage crisis in Algeria at a gas plant in the Sahara desert amplified tensions in the region since France sent troops into neighboring Mali on Jan.11, as part of an offensive against rebels linked to al-Qaida in that country.

    But while the hostage situation at a facility near In Amenas may have come to its conclusion, the conflict in Mali continues to grip the landlocked West African country that gained its independence from France in 1960.

    One may not think of Mali as a country that would spur concern in the United States, but northern Mali, an area about the size of France or twice the size of Colorado, is controlled by a Tuareg militia, Ansar al-Din, and its terrorist group allies, including al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb. AQIM is al-Qaida’s North African wing and emerged in Algeria. These groups want to impose Islamic law across Mali.

    U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon warned in a report released late last year that northern Mali was "at risk of becoming a permanent haven for terrorists and organized criminal networks where people are subjected to a very strict interpretation of Shariah law and human rights are abused on a systematic basis."

    Adding to that warning, the United States’ top commander in Africa, Gen. Carter F. Ham, said in December that AQIM operates training camps in northern Mali, earning its money through kidnapping ransoms and trafficking. “As each day goes by, al-Qaida and other organizations are strengthening their hold in northern Mali,” Ham said, according to the New York Times.

    In northern Mali, now a haven for jihadists, Shariah law is used to terrorize the population. “This is a place where teenage couples risk death by stoning if they hold hands in public,” Peter Chilson, who has written on Mali for Foreign Policy magazine, wrote recently.

    According to Reuters, Human Rights Watch estimates hundreds of children, some as young as 12, have been recruited into the Islamists' ranks.

    The stand-off between radical Islamists in the north and what remains of the Malian government in the south has gripped the country since last year, when radicals seized control of the north after a coup in the capital of Bamako in March that removed President Amadou Toumani Toure. In May, Ansar al-Din captured the historic city of Timbuktu, a world heritage site, and destroyed some of the shrines.

    Following the death of Libya’s Moammar Gadhafi in October 2011, Tuareg fighters who had been fighting alongside the deposed leader’s forces, returned to northern Mali and helped Islamist militants to oust Malian troops last spring. Their intention was to establish a Tuareg-led state in the region. Tuareg people are nomadic, but most live in parts of Niger and Mali. The Tuareg’s alliance with the Islamists eventually fell apart.

    After the coup last spring, Mali’s army fled the north, defeated.

    On Dec. 20, the U.N. Security Council created the "Mali Support Mission,” approving 3,300 African troops -- mainly from Nigeria, Burkina Faso, Niger, Togo, Benin, and Ivory Coast -- to take on the militants in late 2013. The implementation, however, was not well defined and scheduled.

    France sent troops to Mali on Jan. 11 to help their allies wrest control of the north, after radicals seized control of Konna, a strategically located central town. "Mali is facing an assault by terrorist elements coming from the north whose brutality and fanaticism is known across the world," President Francois Hollande said, according to Agence France-Presse.

    Through airstrikes, France had driven the rebels out of Konna by Jan. 12.

    According to Foreign Policy, an Islamist leader in Mali, Oumar Ould Hamahar, who is a member of the Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa, told a radio station in Europe: "France has opened the gates of hell. … It has fallen into a trap much more dangerous than Iraq, Afghanistan or Somalia."

    There are currently about 1,400 French troops in Mali, the BBC has reported, and hundreds more foreign troops are on the way. The United States has agreed to offer France help airlifting its troops and equipment.

    France has said it will remain in Mali until the country is stable again.

    Meanwhile, in the neighboring country of Algeria, foreign hostages were held at a gas plant, reportedly by Mokhtar bel Mokhtar, a one-eyed al-Qaida-linked militant. Mokhtar, former leading figure in AQIM, left the group in late 2012 due to a falling out. The hostage-takers reportedly said the attack was in response to France's military operation in Mali.

    Related content:

    Algerian militant known as 'Mr. Marlboro' raked in millions from kidnappings

    In Mali, land of 'gangster-jihadists,' ransoms help fuel the movement

    France launches 'tough' ground offensive against Mali's Islamist rebels

    77 comments

    Romney talked about Mali and got ridiculed for it. He was right. Barack was wrong. The troops Barack had armed and trained joined the terrorist at the drop of a hat. Quit arming Muslims. None of them will ever be on our side.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: france, al-qaida, algeria, featured, mali, mokhtar, tuareg
  • 6
    Apr
    2012
    5:57am, EDT

    'We, the people': Tuareg rebels in Mali declare new state of Azawad

    MLNA via AFP - Getty Images file

    Tuareg fighters gather at an undisclosed location in Mali in February, in this photo released by the MNLA rebel movement.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Updated at 8:19 a.m. ET: Mali's desert Tuaregs proclaimed independence for what they call the state of Azawad on Friday after capturing key towns this week in an advance that caught the newly installed junta off guard.

    Nomadic Tuaregs have nurtured the dream of secession since Mali's own independence from France in 1960, but have little foreign support for a move neighbors fear could encourage other separatist movements. The African Union said in a statement Friday that its commission chairman Jean Ping "firmly condemned" the declaration, which it said was "null and of no value whatsover."


    This week's seizure of Mali's north -- a desert zone bigger than France – by the Tuareg-led MNLA rebel group came with the help of arms and men spilling out of Libya's conflict.

    It was backed by Islamists with ties to al-Qaida, triggering fears of the emergence of a new rogue state.

    Coup topples 'incompetent regime' in Mali

    "The Executive Committee of the MNLA calls on the entire international community to immediately recognize, in a spirit of justice and peace, the independent state of Azawad," Billal Ag Acherif, the MNLA’s secretary-general, said on its French-language website.

    MLNA via AFP - Getty Images file

    On the move: Tuareg fighters are seen in pickup trucks in an undisclosed location in Mali in February this year, in this picture released by the MNLA rebel movement.

    The statement, which listed decades of Tuareg grievances over their treatment by the distant southern capital Bamako, began with “We, the people of Azawad” and invoked “the right of peoples to self-determination” and articles of the United Nations charter about the rights of indigenous people.

    'Lasting peace'
    It said the group recognized borders with neighboring states and pledged to create a democratic state.

    The statement spoke of massacres dating back to 1963 and claimed the Mali government had failed to act as people died during several droughts dating back to 1967.

    In the first installment of Rock Center's Hidden Planet series, Richard Engel travels to Mali, on the edge of the Sahara desert, to discover the city of Timbuktu.

    It aded that the MNLA wanted to create a "lasting peace."

    The statement was datelined in the town of Gao, which along with the ancient trading post of Timbuktu and other northern towns fell to rebels in a matter of 72 hours this week as soldiers in Mali's army either defected to the rebellion or fled.

    UN: Ancient treasures of Timbuktu under threat amid Mali unrest

    French Defense Minister Gerard Longuet said Paris firmly rejected the declaration.

    "A unilateral declaration of independence, which is not recognized by African states, would not have any meaning for us," Longuet told Reuters.

    African states to send troops
    The rebels' advance capitalized on confusion in Bamako after a March 22 coup by mid-ranking officers whose main goal had ironically been to beef up efforts to quash the rebellion.

    Mali's worried neighbors see the handover of power back to civilians as a precondition for moves to help stabilize the country and have imposed economic and diplomatic sanctions aimed at forcing junta leader Captain Amadou Sanogo to step down.

    The skyrocketing price of gold has led to a rush on the precious metal in the United States and throughout the world, but some of the mining involves child labor and a dangerous process involving mercury. NBC News Chief Foreign Correspondent Richard Engel journeys to Mali's artisanal gold mines.

    On Thursday a team of mediators said they were hopeful Sanogo would soon announce steps that would allow them to drop the sanctions on Africa's third-largest gold miner, which include the closure of borders and the suspension of its account at the regional central bank.

    US cuts off aid to Mali after coup

    Separately, military planners at the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) prepared the mandate for a force of up to 3,000 soldiers, which could be deployed in Mali with the dual aim of securing the return to constitutional order and halting any further rebel advance.

    Expert: War on terror at 'critical' point as al-Qaida looks to regroup in Africa

    Ivory Coast General Soumaila Bakayoko said after the talks in the Ivorian economic capital Abidjan there was a "clear will" of all ECOWAS states to address the crisis in Mali, but gave no details on troop commitments or a deployment timetable.

    Msnbc.com's Ian Johnston and Reuters contributed to this report.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Horns worth more than gold: Rhinos face worst year
    • 'We, the people': Mali rebels declare independence
    • Christian, Jewish holidays intersect Friday
    • Ditch the umbrella? 20 million in England hit by drought
    • Millionaire's daughter drove looters around during London riots
    • Report: US democracy workers detained in UAE
    • Online coup rumors provoke China social media crackdown

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    7 comments

    Betcha Volkswagen is now second-thinking offering an expensive car of the same name...

    Show more
    Explore related topics: africa, featured, rebels, mali, tuareg, new-state, azawad

Browse

  • featured,
  • world-news,
  • syria,
  • china,
  • europe,
  • afghanistan,
  • world,
  • middle-east,
  • israel,
  • pakistan,
  • egypt,
  • iran,
  • russia,
  • updated,
  • uk,
  • north-korea,
  • africa,
  • london,
  • military,
  • assad,
  • france,
  • protest,
  • environment,
  • al-qaida,
  • britain,
  • taliban,
  • nuclear,
  • italy,
  • india,
  • terrorism,
  • asia,
  • germany,
  • japan,
  • vatican,
  • economy,
  • crime,
  • human-rights,
  • mexico,
  • south-africa,
  • pope
Also
Advertise | AdChoices

Becky Bratu

NBC News editor, Columbia J-school graduate, W&L alumna, reporter, postmodern Romanian vagabond. I dream in various languages.

Archives

  • 2013
    • May (155)
    • April (275)
    • March (432)
    • February (332)
    • January (323)
  • 2012
    • December (332)
    • November (332)
    • October (313)
    • September (360)
    • August (362)
    • July (310)
    • June (351)
    • May (427)
    • April (404)
    • March (427)
    • February (347)
    • January (284)
  • 2011
    • December (357)
    • November (3)

Most Commented

  • Girl's organs removed after vacation death; family believes they may have been sold (618)
  • Chef to the stars Miki Nozawa dies following confrontation over unpaid bill (413)
  • Price of a night's sleep? Israel reportedly spends $127K to build bedroom on PM's plane (445)
  • Two waiters arrested in killing of Malcolm X's grandson in Mexico (414)
  • Japanese mayor: WWII 'comfort women' sex slaves 'necessary' for morale (393)
  • Six Americans, Afghan children among dead in Kabul suicide attack (536)
  • 'Love has won out over hate': France becomes 14th country to allow gay marriage (1600)

Other blogs

  • The Body Odd
  • Cosmic Log
  • Red Tape Chronicles
  • PhotoBlog
  • US News
  • Open Channel

NBCNews.com top stories

3147,10
© 2013 NBCNews.com
  • World news on NBCNews.com
  • About us
  • Contact
  • Help
  • Site map
  • Careers
  • Closed captioning
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Advertise