Arab Times

Top jihadist arrested in Mali

Keita was heading to Timbuktu

-

BAMAKO, March 31, (AFP): A key Islamist suspect believed to head Mali’s southern jihadist fighters was in detention in the capital Bamako on Thursday following his capture by special forces, security sources told AFP.

“Souleymane Keita, the top jihadist leader in the south of the country, was arrested a few days ago on the Mauritania­n border, and transferre­d to Bamako on Wednesday,” a security source said.

Keita’s arrest comes as west African nations scramble to tighten security following a string of attacks against hotels and restaurant­s popular with foreigners that have highlighte­d the growing reach of jihadist groups in the region.

Keita is one of two suspected leaders of extremists operating in southern and central Mali that have been linked to the Ansar Dine group, which was one of three Islamist factions that conquered vast swathes of the country’s north in 2012 before being repulsed by French troops.

A second security source told AFP that Keita’s arrest near the town of Sokolo followed the capture of one of his allies a few months ago in the centre of the country.

“He was about to head to Timbuktu, probably to meet up with his mentor Iyad Ag Ghaly in the Kidal region” in northeast Mali, the source said, referring to the Tuareg leader of Ansar Dine.

Malian intelligen­ce officials say Keita and Ag Ghaly fought side by side in 2012 in northern Mali.

When French troops stepped in to help Mali’s government reconquer the area in January 2013, Keita moved south to his native region to set up a new group, the Khaled Ibn al-Walid “katiba” or combattant unit.

The group, also known as the “Ansar Dine of the South”, has some 200 fighters, a Malian security source said.

Heading the Islamist push into central Mali is another jihadist commander who cut his teeth in the country’s northern conflict, radical preacher Amadou Koufa, say security sources.

He leads the Macina Liberation Front (FLM), a new group that emerged in 2015 and has claimed responsibi­lity for a number of attacks, some targeting security forces in central Mali.

Long focused on targets in northern Mali, jihadist attacks have spread since the beginning of the year to the centre and the south.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait