Yahoo – AFP,
Serge Daniel, 20 June 2015
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Malian
Tuareg leaders attend a signing ceremony for a peace agreement
in Algiers on
May 14, 2015 (AFP Photo/Farouk Batiche)
|
Bamako
(AFP) - Mali's Tuareg-led rebel alliance signed a landmark deal on Saturday to
end years of unrest in a nation riven by ethnic divisions and in the grip of a
jihadist insurgency.
The Algiers
Accord aims to bring stability to the country's vast northern desert, cradle of
several Tuareg uprisings since the 1960s and a sanctuary for Islamist fighters
linked to Al-Qaeda.
The
document had already been signed in May by the government and loyalist militias
but the Coordination of Azawad Movements (CMA), a coalition of rebel groups,
had been holding out until amendments were agreed two weeks ago.
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French and
Malian soldiers patrol next
to the Djingareyber Mosque on June 6,
2015 in
Timbuktu (AFP Photo/Philippe
Desmazes)
|
Dutch
Foreign Minister Bert Koenders, former head of the UN peacekeeping force in
Mali, and his French counterpart Laurent Fabius welcomed the CMA's commitment
to the accord and urged Mali to ensure the deal was implemented.
"This
responsibility lies primarily with the Malian actors and the government and
armed groups must regain mutual trust -- the only possibility for
progress," they said in a joint op-ed in French daily Le Monde published
on Friday.
"The
political party leaders also have an important role to play, as well as civil
society, including women and youth. In a word, reconciliation is the business
of all Malians," they added.
Ramtane
Lamamra, the foreign minister of Algeria, which has been leading international
efforts to mediate the peace talks, attended the ceremony, along with scores of
rebels.
The peace accord,
hammered out over months under the auspices of the UN, calls for the creation
of elected regional assemblies but stop short of autonomy or federalism for
northern Mali.
'Untenable'
The Malian
government and several armed groups signed the document on May 15 in Bamako, in
a ceremony spurned by the CMA.
The rebels
finally agreed to commit on June 5 after winning a stipulation that its
fighters be included in a security force for the north, and that residents of
the region be represented better in government institutions, among other
concessions.
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A French
soldier talks to residents
while patrolling the village of M'Bouna
in the
Timbuktu region on June 5,
2015 (AFP Photo/Philippe Desmazes)
|
"The
situation is untenable for everyone -- for the people, for the United Nations
and government forces."
But Drabo,
a columnist at the pro-government L'Essor daily, warned that the CMA's
signature did not guarantee peace.
"In
1992, a national pact was signed here between the government and armed groups
and... fighting continued for three years after the signing," he said.
Mali was
shaken by a coup in 2012 that cleared the way for Tuareg separatists to seize
towns and cities of the north, an expanse of desert the size of Texas.
Al-Qaeda-linked
militants then overpowered the Tuareg, taking control of northern Mali for
nearly 10 months until they were ousted in a French-led military offensive.
The country
remains deeply divided, with the Tuareg and Arab populations of the north
accusing sub-Saharan ethnic groups in the more prosperous south of
marginalising them.
Deadliest
UN mission
Loyalist
militias seized the northeastern town of Menaka from the CMA in April,
violating a ceasefire agreement and sparking an uptick in violence that left
many dead on both sides.
The move
threatened to undermine the country's already fragile and long-running peace
process, but the pro-government forces later agreed to withdraw.
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Malian
Armed Forces soldiers patrol with the French military on June 6, 2015
in
Timbuktu, as part of "Operation Barkhane", an anti-terrorist
operation in the
Sahel (AFP Photo/Philippe Desmazes)
|
The Malian
government has also lifted arrest warrants issued in 2013 against several CMA
rebels in a further attempt to smooth the path to peace.
The MINUSMA
peacekeeping force in Mali has suffered the largest losses among the UN's 16
missions worldwide, and is regularly targeted by militants in the north.
Its
commander, Major General Michael Lollesgaard, said on Wednesday the force
lacked the training, logistics and intelligence capabilities to effectively
carry out operations.
Koenders
and Fabius, in their Le Monde piece, urged European countries to step up their
support for MINUSMA, which is made up largely of predominantly African troops.
"The
crisis in Mali is indeed key to the interests of the whole of Europe, through
the rise of terrorism and the amplification of the flow of migrants, and the UN
mission plays an essential role in the stabilisation of Mali and, indirectly,
the whole region," they said.
Since
MINUSMA's deployment in 2013, 36 soldiers have died and more than 200 have been
wounded, making it the deadliest mission since Somalia in the 1990s.




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