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Mali Takfiri Group Claims Attack on UN Base

Mali Takfiri Group Claims Attack on UN Base
folder_openAfrica... access_time8 years ago
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Local Editor

Malian Takfiri militant group Ansar Dine said it carried out a suicide and rocket attack on a UN base in Kidal, north Mali Friday that killed six peacekeepers, the SITE Intelligence Group said.

Mali Takfiri Group Claims Attack on UN Base

Ansar Dine, led by Tuareg commander Iyad Ag Ghali, briefly seized the desert north alongside al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb [AQIM] in 2012 and the two groups are involved in an intensifying insurgency that has spilled over Mali's borders.

In its statement, Ansar Dine named the suicide bomber who blew himself up with a truck bomb as Muhammad Abdullah bin Hudhayfa al-Hosni from Mauritania. Heavy weapons fire ensued.

It was not immediately clear if Ansar Dine was also responsible for an ambush on Malian soldiers near Timbuktu Friday that killed three.

"The [Kidal] operation is a message to the Crusader invaders and all those who support them and promise to send their soldiers to us, like the German President said in his current visit to Bamako," according to the statement sent late Friday.

Germany had pledged to send 650 soldiers to help support a UN peacekeeping mission [MINUSMA] and President Joachim Gauck visited Mali's southern capital Bamako Friday.

As well as UN peacekeepers, militant strikes had targeted hotels popular with Westerners, killing 30 in Ouagadougou in January, and Malian army checkpoints.

MINUSMA has the highest rate of casualties among active UN missions and many of the dead are Africans who occupy some of the most dangerous front-line positions in the north.

The six dead peacekeepers in the Kidal attack were all from neighboring Guinea, the UN Security Council said in a statement.

French troops, which ousted Takfiri militants from northern towns in 2013, are still fighting them in north Mali and neighboring Sahel countries but casualties are rare due to superior training and equipment.

Sean Smith, Africa analyst at Verisk Maplecroft, said that the threat of attacks would remain extremely high unless France expands its force or MINUSMA changes its mandate to include counter-terror operations.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

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