French jets struck more targets in northern Mali yesterday after
President François Hollande told cheering Malian crowds he would finish
the job of restoring government control across the country.
On a
one-day visit to Mali with his ministers for foreign affairs and
defence, Mr Hollande was greeted as a liberator by jubilant crowds in
the northern town of Timbuktu, which French and Malian forces retook
from Islamist rebels last week.
He also received a rapturous
welcome in the capital, Bamako, where he said France’s decision to
intervene against the rebels was partly out of duty to a country which
had sent its men to fight for France in the second World War.
Mobbed
by crowds chanting “Vive la France” and waving French tricolours, Mr
Hollande described his visit to Mali as “the most important day in my
political career”. His foreign minister, Laurent Fabius, was shown on
French television pushing away tears as he toured Timbuktu surrounded by
heavy security.
Although the insurgents have been driven from
Mali’s main northern towns, Mr Hollande cautioned that the task of
France’s military operation in Mali was not yet over.
“There is still a whole part of the north that remains unconquered . . .
“There
are terrorist elements concentrated in some areas of the country,
others who are dispersed. There are risks of terrorism. So, we have not
yet finished our mission,” he said.
Restored sovereignty
Mr
Hollande said France would withdraw its troops from Mali once the
government in Bamako had restored sovereignty over all its national
territory and a UN-backed African military force could take over from
the French.
“We do not foresee staying indefinitely,” he said, although he spelled out no specific time frame for the French mission.
Drawn
mostly from Mali’s neighbours, the African force is expected to number
more than 8,000. But its deployment has been hampered by shortages of
kit and airlift capacity and questions about who will fund the estimated
$1 billion cost.
Within hours of Mr Hollande’s departure on
Saturday evening, the French military said it had carried out
“significant” air raids targeting logistics bases and training camps
used by rebels to the north of the desert town of Kidal.
A
military spokesman said the bombings took place around the settlement of
Tessalit, close to the Algerian border, one of the main gateways into
the Adrar des Ifoghas mountains where the militants are believed to be
hiding after fleeing major towns. These bombings continued yesterday,
the military said.
Attack helicopters
French
attack helicopters and transport planes carrying special forces were
reported to have left the city of Gao to reinforce the French and
Chadian troops stationed at the airport in Kidal.
The town of
Kidal itself is under the control of the pro-autonomy MNLA Tuareg rebel
group, which occupied it after Ansar Dine fighters fled six days ago.
Malian
foreign minister Tieman Coulibaly welcomed the success of France’s
military operation but urged the former colonial power not to consider
scaling back its mission.
“Faced with hardened fighters whose
arsenals must be destroyed, we want this mission to continue. Especially
as the aerial dimension is very important,” he told the Journal du
Dimanche.
Paris has pressed Bamako to open negotiations with the
MNLA, whose uprising last year triggered a military coup in Bamako in
March, as a step toward political reunification of north and south Mali.
Mr
Coulibaly played down the possibility of direct talks with the MNLA but
said it was clear that there needed to be a greater devolution of power
from the mainly black African south to northern Mali, an underdeveloped
region home to many Tuaregs and Arabs.
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