Mali car bomb kills 50 in fresh blow to peace efforts

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A suicide bombing targeting militia groups committed to restoring peace in Mali left around 50 people dead on Wednesday and struck a fresh blow at long-running efforts to stabilise the troubled north.

The car bomb attack in Gao, the region’s biggest city, targeted a camp housing former rebels and pro-government militia who are signatories to a 2015 peace accord struck with the government.

President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita ordered three days of national mourning following the attack, the worst in the country in recent years.

The group of Algerian militants and Al-Qaeda ally Mokhtar Belmokhtar claimed responsibility, in a statement, for the suicide bombing. The group, allied to Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), identified the attacker as Abdelhadi al-Foulani, in a statement cited by the US-based SITE watchdog and Mauritanian news agency Al-Akhbar.

Defence Minister Abdoulaye Idrissa Maiga swiftly headed to Gao following the blast.

The attack occurred as former rebels from the Tuareg-led CMA movement prepared to go on a joint patrol with pro-government militia members, under the terms of the peace deal.

 Powerful blast 

Mali’s north fell under the control of Tuareg-led rebels and militants groups linked to Al-Qaeda in 2012. The militants sidelined the rebels to take sole control.

Although they were largely ousted by a French-led military operation in January 2013, implementation of the peace accord has been piecemeal with insurgents still active across large parts of the region.

The joint patrols, which also include regular Malian army troops, are supposed to help prepare for the reorganisation of the army.

“The provisional toll is 47 dead, including five suicide bombers, and several dozen injured”, the government said in a statement.

A Malian military source told a foreign news agency that 53 people had been killed and 110 injured.

The UN peacekeeping mission MINUSMA said in a statement that “dozens of deaths and dozens of injuries are reported among the 600 individuals hosted in the camp”.

The attack took place at 0840 GMT as the former rival groups “were due to soon leave on a joint patrol,” a MINUSMA source added.

The powerful blast, which went off during a training session, ripped apart bodies, scattering limbs across the camp, a witness said.

The vehicle used in the blast bore the logo of the unit coordinating the joint patrols, army spokesperson Diarran Kone told a foreign news agency.

 ‘Fragile peace’ 

The assailant “came to town alone to procure equipment and fit the vehicle out to commit a suicide attack”, a Malian security source who asked not to be named told a foreign news agency.

The camp is very close to Gao airport, a key transport hub which was closed briefly in late November following an attack blamed on militants.

The car bomb destroyed prefabricated hangars used by MINUSMA’s aircraft and damage to the installations and debris on the runway made the airport temporarily unusable.

“The joint patrols were the target,” French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault told French media on Wednesday. “The political aim is to hamper the peace process and reconciliation.”

“Peace remains fragile,” he added.

France is considering a UN Security Council draft resolution that would set up a sanctions regime for Mali to target opponents of the peace deal signed 19 months ago.

The UN Security Council met on Wednesday and agreed to consider setting up a sanctions regime for Mali to punish those who are hindering the struggling peace deal.

Condemning the attack, council members said “persistent delays threaten the viability of the agreement” signed by the Malian government and rebel groups 19 months ago, said Swedish Ambassador Olof Skoog, this month’s council president.

The proposed sanctions regime would set up a mechanism to allow individuals and entities to be blacklisted by the United Nations. Targeted sanctions include a global travel ban and an assets freeze.

The United Nations has deployed 13,000 troops in Mali to serve in the MINUSMA force, considered one of the deadliest missions in peacekeeping.

 

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