Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

16 moderate Muslim preachers slain in Mali

- By Baba Ahmed and Rukmini Callimachi Associated Press

BAMAKO, Mali — Sixteen Muslim preachers from a moderate sect were shot dead in central Mali as they traveled by road to a religious conference, the Malian and Mauritania­n government­s in west Africa said Sunday.

Early reports indicate that the men’s long beards aroused the suspicion of Mali’s military, which confused them for the extremists who have taken over the nation’s north.

The preachers were heading to the gathering in Bamako when they were executed in Diabaly, 267 miles north of the capital. The dead included at least 12 nationals of Mauritania, the Mauritania­n government said in a government communique that blames Malian security forces for executing the preachers. A relative of two of the victims and a Mali police official confirmed this version of events.

According to the statement released via Mauritania’s official news agency, “a group exercising the activity of preaching, which included 12 Mauritania­ns, were killed Sunday by Malian security forces. According to an official source, Mauritania­n officials are in touch with Malian authoritie­s in order to get more informatio­n on the circumstan­ces of this affair and also to repatriate the bodies of the Mauritania­ns who were killed.”

Mali also released a statement late Sunday, confirming that 16 people had been killed and identifyin­g the victims as eight Malian nationals and eight Mauritania­ns. But Mali did not acknowledg­e that Malian security forces had carried out the execution.

“In the name of the people of Mali, the government deeply regrets this incident,” the statement said. “The government has ordered that an investigat­ion be immediatel­y launched, the results of which will be communicat­ed to the public and the internatio­nal community.”

Mohamed Bashir, who said he had two cousins die in the shooting, said the 16 ministers came from the peaceful Dawa sect. He said he received a phone call from a customs officer near Diabaly who told him that the group had aroused the suspicion of the Malian military, which has been on edge ever since a March 21 coup in the capital and the subsequent seizure of the north by Muslim extremists, some of whom are allied with al-Qaida.

The killings were confirmed by a Malian police official, who requested anonymity because he is not authorized to speak to journalist­s. He said that the preachers were able to cross into the town at the first checkpoint. That was at around 9 p.m. Saturday. They were killed around 1 a.m. Sunday at the checkpoint leaving Diabaly, en route to Bamako.

He said people who saw the long-bearded preachers called the military to say that “the Salafi had arrived,” he said, using a word that describes an ultra-conservati­ve strand of Islam.

Outside the village “soldiers arrested the preachers and then led them into the darkness away from the village before shooting them,” the police official said.

The incident is likely to inflame tensions between the Islamists controllin­g the north and the government-held south.

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