Arab News

Mali asks Islamic High Council to begin dialogue with Al-Qaeda

- AP, AFP Bamako

Mali’s government has asked the country’s Islamic High Council to begin a dialogue with Al-Qaedalinke­d groups in a new effort to address a nearly decade-long insecurity crisis.

It is not clear when the dialogue will begin, but the council will lead discussion­s with Malian militant leaders Iyad Ag Ghaly and Amadou Kouffa of the Al-Qaeda-linked group known as JNIM, the council said.

Mohamed Kibiri, spokesman for the council, said on Tuesday that he was asked by the government last week to launch discussion­s. He said they are working with their representa­tives in the country’s north.

“The only directive we have received is to negotiate only with the Malians,” he said. “The other jihadists we consider invaders.”

Mali’s Minister of Religious Affairs and Worship Mamadou Koné confirmed that the government asked the council to lead discussion­s with the two groups.

This is not the first time the Malian government has asked the council to open dialogue with jihadist groups. Earlier this year, the council reached a ceasefire agreement between an Al-Qaedalinke­d group and local fighters in a village in the Niono circle in central

Mali. The jihadists granted freedom of movement to the villagers, and peaceful cohabitati­on with the army and local armed groups, in exchange for compulsory veiling of women, collection of taxes and traditiona­l justice.

Mali has been fighting growing insecurity since 2012, when Al-Qaeda-linked groups took over parts of the north. Despite a Frenchled military operation that forced many rebels from their northern stronghold­s in 2013, insurgents quickly regrouped and have been advancing year after year toward the south of the country, where the Malian capital is located.

Meanwhile, the French army said Tuesday its troops shot dead a woman while conducting an antiterror reconnaiss­ance operation with Malian soldiers in the west African country, prompting an investigat­ion.

The woman died on Monday during a joint patrol “in an area where elements of an armed terrorist group has been detected east of Gossi” in the north, the French general staff said.

The soldiers saw two individual­s riding a motorbike, but they left it behind to flee into the undergrowt­h when they spotted the French and Malian troops, said the statement.

“An abandoned assault rifle, ammunition and a military bag are discovered near the motorbike,” it added.

The soldiers “engage in the pursuit of one of the two individual­s in the woods. Four warning shots are fired to stop him but the latter moves further away.”

“The individual turns sharply toward the soldiers who fire to neutralize” the target and then “discover that it is a woman,” suspected of being one of the people on the motorcycle.

“Residents of the nearest village are called to give the identity of this person” but “no one knows her,” said the general staff, adding that the body was buried at the site.

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