The Star Malaysia

Macron due in Mali to back anti-militant force

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BAMAKO: French President Emmanuel Macron

(pic) is due in Mali to consolidat­e Western backing for a regional anti-militant force, as France beefs up its counter-terror operations in the area.

The so- called “G5 Sahel” countries just south of the Sahara – Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania and Niger – have pledged to fight militants on their own soil with instabilit­y and militant attacks on the rise.

Based in Mali, the 5,000-strong G5 Sahel force is designed to bolster the 12,000 UN peacekeepe­rs and France’s own 4,000-strong military operation known as Barkhane operating in the region.

Macron will attend a summit on July 2 with the leaders of the African nations involved, “marking a new step” as the force is formally launched, a source in the French presidency told said on Thursday. Operations across Burkina Faso, Niger and Mali, all hit with frequent militant attacks, would be co-ordinated with French troops, the source said, while help would be given to set up command centres.

The new force will support national armies trying to catch militants across porous frontiers.

Macron visited Gao in northern Mali in May, his first foreign visit as president outside Europe, and said French troops would remain “until the day there is no more terrorism in the region”.

France launched an interventi­on to chase out militants taken key northern cities in Mali in 2013.

That mission evolved into the current Barkhane deployment launched in 2014 with an expanded mandate for counter-terror operations across the Sahel.

Macron is hoping that the 50 million euros (RM245.12mil) the European Union has pledged to the Sahel force will be supplement­ed by extra support from Germany, the Netherland­s, Belgium and the United States, which already has a drone base in Niger.

The French president will specify the final details of his nation’s support tomorrow, but the focus is expected to be on help with equipment.

The UN Security Council has unanimousl­y adopted a resolution that welcomes the G5 Sahel deployment but does not grant it UN authorisat­ion, and France was forced to drop a request for a special UN report on financing for the force.

Sources in the French presidency said it wants the Sahel force to be active on the ground by autumn, before looking for wider sources of funding by the end of the year or in early 2018.

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