Published on 16 Jan 2014 | Amadou Toumani Toure, who resigned in April 2012 as part of a deal with coup leaders, now faces charges of high treason. His administration has also been accused of taking money from al-Qaeda-linked fighters who raise money by kidnapping westerners.According to Tuareg commanders, Toure's government also encouraged drug smuggling, which brought in even more money.The Tuareg claimed northern Mali's Azawad region in 2012 and declared themselves independent after rebel fighters forced Malian soldiers out of the region, but their rebellion was crushed when al-Qaeda fighters entered the country.Al Jazeera's Andy Gallacher reports.
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Showing posts with label Mali. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mali. Show all posts
Thursday, January 16, 2014
Saturday, November 2, 2013
AJE - highlighting potential
Arabs fight for independence in Northern Mali :
Published on 2 Nov 2013 | Exclusive report from Northern Mali, where Al Jazeera found men willing to fight to the death for independance in a remote and desolate place.Arab fighters want self-rule over the north, what they call Azawad.As part of a series on the security challenge facing the country, Al Jazeera's Mohamed Vall went to meet
Published on 2 Nov 2013 | Exclusive report from Northern Mali, where Al Jazeera found men willing to fight to the death for independance in a remote and desolate place.Arab fighters want self-rule over the north, what they call Azawad.As part of a series on the security challenge facing the country, Al Jazeera's Mohamed Vall went to meet
Thursday, October 17, 2013
Behind Bars: RT goes inside Gitmo
Published on Oct 17, 2013 | Everyone may know the name of America's most-notorious prison - but few know what really happens behind the barbed wire at Guantanamo. RT has been given rare access to the facility that's been indefinitely detaining terror suspects without charge for more than a decade.
Friday, September 7, 2012
News revealed that For months Mali was pressured to make a request for military support .
Confusion in Mali after request for military intervention
BAMAKO, Mali — Days have passed since Mali’s interim government made a formal request to neighboring nations for military help to try to take back the country’s north, which fell to Islamist rebels after a coup five months ago.
But in a bizarre twist, the Malian government is refusing to confirm to its own people that it has made the regional appeal. Confusion in the capital, Bamako, is growing and heightening the perception that the soldiers who led the March coup — but were then pressured into handing power back to civilians — are still calling the shots.
There has been no mention on state TV of the formal request to the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS). And four days after the request for military help was confirmed by France, and after reporters from several news organizations were leaked copies of the official document, presidential spokesman Diarra Diakite said he had nothing to say on the matter, and that he had not seen the request.
“I myself have not seen this request, and if I had I would have sent it out for publication in the press,” Diarra told The Associated Press Friday. “Up to this moment, I haven’t seen it and so please don’t ask me, as I don’t know anything about it.”
A copy of the request dated Sept. 1, which was seen by AP, shows that Interim President Dioncounda Traore asked the West African regional bloc of 15 nations to provide five battalions to try to take back the north. Mali is also asking for air support to destroy rebel bases in their remote hideouts, as well as to gather intelligence.
Traore also asked for help in restructuring the Malian army, including training infantry and artillery units, and logistical support including de-mining equipment and water purification systems to be used in the field.
For months, the international community has been pressing Mali to make the formal request for military help so that regional leaders can ask the U.N. Security Council to send forces into the country. France and the United States have expressed deep concern about the north becoming a base for international terrorism. Two rebel groups control the immense territory, and both have ties to al-Qaida’s affiliate in North Africa.
More from source | Associated Press, Published: September 7
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