A
delegation of Tuareg rebels from northern Mali on Thursday held talks with top
French foreign ministry officials on resolving the country's conflict,
officials said.
The meeting
brought together "senior officials" from the ministry and took place
at the request of the rebels from the Azawad National Liberation Movement
(MNLA), foreign ministry spokesman Philippe Lalliot said.
The
delegation was headed by MNLA leader Bilal Ag Acherif. An MNLA source said the
meeting lasted for two hours.
"We
said that we wanted France to hear us and that it facilitates the return of peace,"
said Moussa Ag Assarid, an MNLA spokesman based in Paris.
Lalliot,
speaking before the meeting, said it was "an opportunity for us to remind
the MNLA of what it must do for a lasting peace in Mali by renouncing its
demand for independence."
He said there
was a pressing need for talks between "the government and non-terrorist
groups in northern Mali at a time when the UN Security Council is about to
authorise an African military intervention at the request of the African
Union."
Several
Islamist groups control Mali's vast desert north after a March coup in Bamako
toppled president Amadou Toumani Toure.
While the
MNLA was initially among those in control of the north, it was chased out by
Islamist groups including Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), Ansar Dine
and the Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa (MUJAO).
France has
played a leading role in pushing west African countries into the creation of a
military force capable of intervening in Mali and reclaiming control of the
north.
The MNLA has
so far refused to support the idea of a foreign intervention, instead asking
for Western backing so it can dislodge the Islamists.
Its forces
clashed with those of MUJAO over the weekend, with both sides claiming victory.
Lalliot
said French officials would urge the MNLA to give up its claims to independence
for the north "so that a longlasting peace can be re-established in
Mali."
The MNLA
and Ansar Dine, which is made up largely of Malians unlike the other
foreigner-dominated Islamist groups in the region, on Friday offered to hold
talks with authorities in Bamako to end the crisis.

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