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Armed groups in Mali claim assault on key northern town

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Armed groups from northern Mali on Tuesday claimed they captured the key town of Bourem, between Gao and Timbuktu, before pulling out, fuelling fears of the collapse of a peace deal between the former rebels and government forces.

In a statement on Tuesday evening, the Malian military said it had repelled a complex attack involving car bombs that left 10 soldiers dead and 13 injured, while 46 “terrorists” were killed.

A senior army official earlier said that troops had regained control of its positions in Bourem with the help of air support.

The Permanent Strategic Framework — a coalition of armed factions that signed a peace agreement with the state in 2015 — issued a statement on Tuesday saying it launched an operation at Bourem, taking “control of the camp and various advanced posts” from the army and the allied Russian paramilita­ry group, Wagner.

The Permanent Strategic Framework’s spokespers­on, Mohamed El Maouloud Ramadane, said in the statement that “intense fighting” preceded the town’s capture.

But the attackers then withdrew, the spokespers­on said. “Our aim is not to stay in the towns,” he explained.

A local commander, who asked not to be named, added: “We have retaken control of the camp and area around Bourem after the air force intervened and combed the area.”

Resident Mahamoud Ould Mety said: “Unidentifi­ed armed groups had encircled the camp and roamed through the town. But the aircraft reacted against them.”

An alliance of predominan­tly Tuareg armed groups launched a revolt in 2012 against the state but signed a peace agreement three years later. The fragile deal, known as the Algiers agreement, came under strain after the civilian government was toppled in 2020 and replaced by a junta.

One of its signatorie­s, the Coordinati­on of Azawad Movements (CMA), on Monday said it considered itself at “war” with the ruling junta.

The region — the cradle of a jihadist insurgency that has swept into three Sahel nations — has seen a resurgence of tension in recent weeks, triggered in part by the pullout of United Nations peacekeepi­ng troops from Mali.

The Permanent Strategic Framework said on Tuesday it had acted in “legitimate defence in the face of provocatio­ns by terrorists from the Malian army accompanie­d by the Wagner militia”.

Bourem lies on the road between the ancient city of Timbuktu and

Gao, close to the Niger River, heading towards the Tuareg fiefdom of Kidal further to the north.

Rivalries have recently intensifie­d between the multitude of armed actors vying for control of the north.

They include jihadist groups fighting against the Malian army, jihadist groups fighting among themselves, Tuareg armed groups fighting against jihadists and Tuareg groups fighting against the Malian army.

The tensions have led to a succession of attacks and clashes.

A suicide attack targeted a military base at Gao on Friday killing about 10 soldiers, the army said on Tuesday. That incident came a day after deadly strikes by suspected jihadists on a northern army camp and a passenger boat killed 64 people.

In late August, the junta had called on the armed groups to relaunch dialogue and the ailing peace deal, amid fears of fresh hostilitie­s after the UN peacekeepe­rs withdraw.

The former rebel groups worry that the pullout may give the junta a “pretext” to reoccupy zones which the peace accords had ceded from central control.

After the UN peacekeepe­rs quit the Ber base near Timbuktu last month there were clashes between troops and jihadists, but also between the army and the CMA.

The Framework says that after the base was vacated, the army and Russian Wagner paramilita­ries carried out summary executions and abuses such as arbitrary arrests and looting against locals.

The UN peacekeepi­ng mission has until 31 December to exit Mali after a decade of struggling to stabilise the country.

Mali’s ruling junta earlier this year ordered the 13000-person mission to withdraw, following the pullout of French troops in 2022. —

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