Arab News

Dozen killed in Mali attack

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BAMAKO: An attack overnight in northern Mali by a pro-government armed group including suicide bombers killed a dozen people, security sources said Wednesday.

“GATIA fighters, accompanie­d by suicide bombers, attacked a rebel Tuareg and anti-government Arab position in the night from Tuesday to Wednesday near the town of Tabankort. There were a dozen deaths in total,” a Western military source told AFP.

“The situation is very volatile, and it is essential to calm the situation,” added the source.

A security source in MINUSMA — the United Nations peacekeepi­ng mission in Mali — confirmed the deaths, adding that two fighters blew themselves up while a third was killed before he was able to detonate his explosives.

GATIA is the commonly-used name for the pro-government Imghad and Allies Tuareg Self-Defense Group.

Tabankort, a settlement northwest of the Tuareg rebel stronghold of Kidal, is controlled by pro-government militias which have clashed over the last month with armed rebels, leading to the deaths of fighters and civilians.

The UN was forced to withdraw a plan to create a “temporary security zone” in Tabankort after a huge protest in the northern city of Gao by pro-government youths who said it would undermine loyalist armed groups fighting the rebels.

Three people were killed Tuesday on a second day of demonstrat­ions against the UN military mission.

Witnesses described a huge crowd of angry youths throwing stones and attempting to storm the MINUSMA headquarte­rs in Gao to protest the UN taking control of a troubled area north of the city.

MINUSMA initially denied it was behind the deaths but later said it would investigat­e to establish its role in the violence.

The agreement between MINUSMA and three rebel groups — the High Council for the Unity of Azawad, the National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad and an anti-government wing of the Arab Movement of Azawad — would have placed Tabankort under exclusive control of UN troops.

MINUSMA helicopter­s destroyed a rebel vehicle near Tabankort in “self-defense” on Jan. 20 following what it described as “direct fire with heavy weapons” on its peacekeepe­rs.

Rebel groups said the action violated UN neutrality, adding that seven militants had been killed and 20 wounded.

The strikes sparked demonstrat­ions hostile to MINUSMA in Kidal.

Algeria and the UN, which are leading mediation talks between the government and rebels, said the violence in Tabankort threatened to jeopardize the peace process.

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