Loading...

Mali Prepares For War Despite Reticent Neighbors

Mali’s rulers are preparing for war to free the north from armed Islamist groups: this was the message from Bamako after a UN meeting, despite the reservations of some of its neighbors to an international taskforce.
 “We felt a commitment from the international community at our side, a solidarity with Mali” a source close to President Dioncounda Traore said.

He was speaking a meeting Wednesday in New York, on the sidelines of the General Assembly, which was devoted to discussion of the Sahel crisis.
 Mali’s authorities knew that neighbors Algeria were trying to make common cause with Mauritania and Niger to oppose the deployment of foreign forces in Mali, said the source.

 “But Paris will do all it can to bring about the convening of the Security Council and a resolution authorizing intervention,” the official source added.

 In Bamako, “people don’t ask ‘When is the war going to begin?’ but ‘How do we set up all the conditions necessary to do it?’ For us, the intervention isn’t far off, it is being prepared,” the source concluded.

 For Madou Diallo, a professor of international law at the University of Bamako, the response from the international community had been “mitigated” and “reserved”.

“We understand the recommendation of ‘extreme caution’ on the part of the Secretary General of the UN, Ban Ki-moon, because this war could lead to humanitarian disasters,” Diallo said.

 “But the Malian population is generally really in favor of intervention in the north” he added. “That’s what you hear in the streets.

” Mali’s newspapers on Thursday however were preoccupied by other matters. They gave over their main headlines not to the UN debate but to clashes in Bamako between rival factions of the police force that left two people wounded.

 Such violence is a symptom of tensions that subsist months after a March coup that ousted president Amadou Toumani Toure, who had been in power for 10 years.

 “In Bamako, there is currently a very fragile link between the politicians and the military,” pointed out Gille Yabi, the Dakar representative of the International Crisis Group (ICG). “The Malian army is a post-coup army,A national commission for negotiations- Talks are planned for October in the capital so that all the players-political parties, civic associations, religious bodies and the army-can agree on how the political transition should be handled, said a source in the president’s office.

The creation of a High Council of State has been proposed, with two vice-presidents, one of whom would be responsible for defense. That post might even go to the coup leader Captain Amadou Haya Sanogo.

 “We can doubt this, however, given the opposition of certain international parties and notably the United States to this appointment,” Yabi said.

 Finally, a special committee could be set up to hold talks with the armed groups now running the north of the country.

 But the word from the presidency is that if there are to be talks, then it should be with the Tuareg separatists of the National Movement for the Liberation of the Azawad (MNLA); perhaps even with Ansar Dine (Defenders of the Faith) the Islamist group led by former Tuareg rebel leader Iyad Ag Ghaly.

 But they are not prepared to sit down with the Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa (MUJAO) nor with Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb.

 The MNLA’s European spokesman Mossa Ag Attaher wrote to the UN chief Ban that their group was “the only objective, credible and unavoidable ally in the struggle against the dark forces implanted” in northern Mali. The problem is that the MNLA has been largely sidelined by the Islamist forces now in control of the north.

News Source; AFP
WAR 8292921737970750518

Post a Comment

emo-but-icon

Home item

Popular Posts

Labels

Current News Nigeria Africa BREAKING NEWS Boko Haram Terrorism Entertainment Goodluck Jonathan South Africa Business Big Brother Africa Mali Egypt AFCON Elections Sudan Abubakar Shekau Zimbabwe Libya Somali FIFA Barack Obama Chelsea Al-Qaeda Syria Mandela Senegal African Union Lagos Manchester United Tunisia Uganda Patience Jonathan Central Africa Jose Mourinho Barcelona Jacob Zuma Stephen Keshi Algeria Dangote Ethiopia Malawi Nigerian Army Oscar Pistorius Zambia Big Brother CHASE Celebrity Saudi Arabia Ansaru Arsenal Mikel Obi Liberia Muslim Brotherhood Olusegun Obasanjo Pope Benedict XVI Okonjo-Iweala Amnesty Argentina Congo North Korea Queen Elizabeth II Robert Mugabe Sierra Leone Angola Buhari Dana Twitter APC Adenuga Alex Ferguson Aljazeera Boston Marathon David Mark EFCC Henry Okah Morsi Sanusi Togo #OccupyNigeria Arik Air Arsene Wenger Basketball Cristiano Ronaldo Current Views Spain UEFA Champions League Uhuru Kenyatta Yobe Babatunde Fashola COZA Drogba Michelle Obama Morgan Tsvangirai Tanzania Wole Soyinka Bakassi Peninsula Mark Zuckerberg Middle East Mozambique Neymar Roman Abrahamovich World Bank World Cup ANC Al Ahly Al Shabaab Aliko Dangote Angelina Jolie Bayelsa Big Brother Star Game Burkina Faso Chevron D'Banj Don Jazzy FELA Farouk Lawan Kim Kardashian Michael Jordan Mike Tyson Peter Odemwingie Sepp Blatter Singapore Social Media Sokoto Super Eagles Swaziland Tiger Woods WhatsApp Yahoo Asari Dokubo BBC British M16 CBN Danbaba Suntai David Beckham Ernest Koroma Fabrice Muamba Femi Falana Hezbollah Julius Malema Kabiru Sokoto Kanu Nwankwo Lesotho Michael Jackson Osama Bin Laden Pope John Paul II Sani Abacha Somaliland South Korea Susan Rice Taraba Yakowa Yemen Yvonne Ndege Zamfara Zaria

Random Posts

Flickr Photo