News on Top French
and Malian troops have entered the key central Malian town of Diabaly,
which has faced heavy airstrikes and fighting since being seized by
al-Qaeda-linked rebels a week ago.
A
convoy of about 30 armoured vehicles carrying some 200 French and
Malian soldiers moved into the town on Monday at about 0900 GMT, without
meeting resistance.
Diabaly,
350 km north of the capital Bamako, had harboured the main cluster of
rebels south of the frontline towns of Mopti and Sevare until French air
attacks forced them to flee or attempt to blend in with locals,
residents said.
A
colonel in the Malian army had said earlier that a "fringe of the
Diabaly population adheres to the jihadists'
theories and we must be
very careful in the coming hours".
French
television footage from Diabaly has shown charred pick-up trucks
abandoned by al Qaeda-linked rebels amid mud brick homes.
One
resident said the rebels had fled the town which was abandoned by many
of its residents, and those remaining lacked food and other essentials.
Checking for landmines
Al Jazeera’s Jacky Rowland, reporting from the capital Bamako, said
that the French military has not yet declared control of the town.“They want to check the area for landmines, booby traps, before they can confidently say they have completely retaken that town from the rebels,” she said.
As
French troops began a deployment towards the rebel-held north, moving
into the strategic central towns of Niono and Sevare on Sunday, Paris
said the aim of the 11-day old military offensive was total victory.
"The goal is the total reconquest of Mali," Jean-Yves Le Drian, French defence minister, said in televised remarks.
"We will not leave any pockets" of resistance.
France
began its military offensive in Mali on January 11, and has said that
African nations must take the lead though it could be some weeks before
they are ready to do so.
Rebels in Mali were reported Sunday to be abandoning some of their
positions and converging on the mountainous region of Kidal, their
northernmost bastion, 1,500km from Bamako and near the border with
Algeria.Kidal was the first town seized by an amalgam of fighters, some linked to al-Qaeda, and Tuareg separatist groups that started the rebellion in March last year.
Tuareg defections
Al Jazeera's Rowland said there are reports of further Tuareg defections from the rebels as they feel their rebellion has been "hijacked" by the al-Qaeda affilated groups.
“The Tuareg have sensed which way the wind is blowing and they’re afraid of ending up on the wrong side as and when this conflict is resolved,” she said.
Meanwhile, the planned deployment of nearly 6,000 African soldiers continued slowly into Bamako, hampered by cash and logistical constraints. Only 150 African troops had arrived by Sunday.
Senegal, Benin and six other West African nations are contributing to the African mission which is expected to take over the baton from France, and Chad has also pledged 2,000 soldiers.
Desire Kadre Ouedraogo, head of the Commission of regional west African bloc ECOWAS, estimated the cost of an African offensive against the armed Islamist groups at about 500 million dollars.
The European Union has pledged 50m euros to the International Support Mission for Mali.







0 comments:
Post a Comment
Post Comment