Kuwait Times

France honors 13 troops killed in Mali helicopter disaster

Macron bestows the Legion d’Honneur on the fallen soldiers

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PARIS: Hundreds of people gathered in Paris on Monday to honor 13 soldiers killed while battling jihadist insurgents in Mali, ahead of a national ceremony to mourn a disaster that has prompted soul-searching over the costs of the six-year campaign in West Africa. Sporadic applause punctuated somber silence as a motorcade bearing the coffins crossed the Alexandre III bridge toward the Invalides military hospital and museum.

The soldiers died when two helicopter­s collided last Monday while pursuing jihadists in northern Mali where militant violence has soared in recent months. It was the biggest single-day loss for the French military in nearly four decades and raised fresh questions about the effectiven­ess of France’s 4,500-member Barkhane operation in Mali and four other countries in the Sahel.

Margot Louvet, 23, came from Gap in southeast France for the procession, wearing a T-shirt with the official portrait of one of the soldiers killed, her friend Antoine Serre, 22. “He was a pearl, the kindest and most generous,” she told AFP. “Being here is a way to mourn him, and realize that he won’t be coming back.”

President Emmanuel Macron led the commemorat­ion in the afternoon, and bestowed the Legion d’Honneur on the fallen soldiers. Some 2,500 people were expected to attend, and the ceremony was broadcast on a giant screen set up outside the Invalides. “It’s an honor to be here,” Emmanuelle Pujol, 54, said on the Alexandre III bridge. “It’s important that people be here to support their comrades and the families.”

‘All options on the table’

The French forces in Mali are tasked with training local security forces to take on the jihadists, but so far these remain woefully unprepared despite years of pledges of more internatio­nal funding and equipment. Forty-one French soldiers have now died in the Sahel over the past six years. The interventi­on began in 2013, when insurgents swept into Mali’s north and rapidly advanced before being pushed back.

But despite France’s presence the jihadists have regrouped to carry out deadly attacks and violence has spread to neighborin­g countries. Macron said the government would begin a thorough review of Barkhane in the wake of the helicopter accident, vowing that “all options are on the table”. He also reiterated his call for EU allies to step up their participat­ion in the West Africa operation after years of failing to secure significan­t support.

Only Britain has contribute­d helicopter­s and security personnel, while the US provides intelligen­ce on jihadist movements across an area the size of Western Europe. So far, only the far-left France Unbowed party has openly called for the Barkhane troops to be brought home. An Ifop poll for the Lettre de l’Expansion newsletter, published yesterday, showed that 58 percent of respondent­s approve the Sahel operation, a level hardly changed from a previous poll in March 2013.

Cartoon controvers­y Controvers­y flared over the weekend after the satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo published a series of cartoons online associatin­g the 13 soldiers’ deaths with the army’s recent recruitmen­t campaign. In one drawing, Macron stands before a coffin in front of the slogan: “I joined the ranks to stand out from the crowd.” The French army’s chief of staff, General Thierry Burkhard, expressed his “indignatio­n” at the cartoons, saying in an open letter they sullied the period of mourning for the bereaved families.

The magazine’s editor Laurent “Riss” Sourisseau defended on Sunday the magazine’s “satirical spirit”, while acknowledg­ing the importance of the work of the French army and the soldiers’ sacrifice. “We know that their mission is difficult and that they are dealing with merciless enemies,” he wrote in a response to Burkhard, seen by AFP. Mali’s President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita will also attend the ceremony, as he tries to defuse growing hostility at home to French and other foreign forces helping to fight Islamic militants. Two Malian gendarmes were shot dead Sunday in the eastern town of Menaka, a local official said. Keita on Saturday urged Malians not to “bite the hands of those who give us theirs today”. Since January, more than 1,500 civilians have been killed in jihadist violence in Mali and Burkina Faso, and more than one million people have been internally displaced across the five countries, the UN said this month. — AFP

 ??  ?? PARIS: French President Emmanuel Macron reviews the guards of honor during a tribute ceremony yesterday at the Invalides monument for the 13 French soldiers killed in Mali. — AFP
PARIS: French President Emmanuel Macron reviews the guards of honor during a tribute ceremony yesterday at the Invalides monument for the 13 French soldiers killed in Mali. — AFP

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