West Africa bloc moves to shield Mali north from Islamic fighters

Photo/AFP/FILE

Guinean President Alpha Conde told AFP after meeting Fabius that only a government of national unity would have the legitimacy to request African military intervention.

BAMAKO, Tuesday

The international community on Tuesday weighed options to help embattled Mali save its north from Islamist fighters who have smashed ancient shrines in Timbuktu and rigged another city with landmines.

As post-coup transition authorities in Bamako find themselves powerless in the face of the armed Al Qaeda-allied groups occupying the north, its neighbours seek a stronger unity government that could request African military intervention.

The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) regional bloc says it has 3,300 troops ready to enter Mali, whose vast north has been occupied by armed rebels for three months after a March 22 coup plunged the nation into chaos.

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius told journalists in Paris his country was “confident” the United Nations Security Council would soon pass a resolution authorising the force to assist Mali win back its territory.

“This will allow our African friends to take a series of decisions, with international backing of course,” Fabius said.

Guinean President Alpha Conde told AFP after meeting Fabius that only a government of national unity would have the legitimacy to request African military intervention.

“One cannot resolve the problem in the north if you don’t first solve the problem in Bamako,” he said.

The formation of such a government will be discussed by ECOWAS leaders and senior Malian political figures at a mini-summit in Burkina Faso’s capital on Saturday.

Currently a 12-month interim government is in place in Bamako, which took over from the junta who overthrew the former regime in March.

The coup had eased the way for Tuareg separatist rebels to seize an area in the north larger than France that they consider their homeland.

However, the previously unknown Islamist Ansar Dine (Defenders of Faith) fighting on their flanks swiftly took the upper hand.

They openly allied with Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb and pushed the Tuareg rebels from all positions of power.

In Timbuktu, where they have enforced sharia law for the past three months, Ansar Dine has in recent days smashed seven tombs of ancient Muslim saints as well as the ‘sacred door’ to a 15th century mosque.

The UN cultural agency UNESCO on Tuesday called for an end to the “repugnant acts” of destruction and called for the head of the agency to create an emergency fund for the cultural treasures and send a mission to assess the damage.

The destruction has deeply upset Malians and prompted outpourings of condemnation from abroad.

“What Ançardine and MJUAO are doing in TimbuKtu is a serious provocation,” said Mr Assoumane Maïga, a humanitarian worker.

According to Mr Maiga, the destruction of the Moskee of Sidi Yehia located in Badjindé, will not affect the Muslims in Timbuktu.