Clashes escalate in Gao as warplanes bomb northern mountains
Despite French military intervention and claims of success in fighting Islamist militias, the conflict in Mali is getting worse. There is also some evidence of imperialist propaganda about the course of events
by Abayomi Azikiwe
French defense ministry officials have said that they are planning to make a withdrawal from Mali by April. Since January 11, when the French military began to bomb and launch a ground invasion into this resource-rich country, the government in Paris has declared that its operations are limited and they were only there as a precursor to the intervention of a regional force from the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).
Although several thousand troops from various African states including
Chad, Nigeria as well as the national army of Mali have entered the
battle alongside the French, the former colonial power also made an
appeal for the United Nations to take over the operations which are
really designed to secure the resources of Mali for the benefit of
western industrialized states. Earlier UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon
had publicly stated that direct intervention by the international body
would jeopardize its personnel carrying out humanitarian work inside the
country and throughout the region.
On February 10, in the northern city of Gao, armed combatants opened
fire on Malian military forces in the downtown area. Soon French
helicopters entered the fray firing into areas in the center of the city
in a battle that lasted well into the evening.
According to a report of the fierce battle published by the Associated
Press, “The attack in Gao shows the Islamic fighters, many of them
well-armed and with combat experience, are determined and daring and it
foreshadows a protracted campaign by France and other nations to restore
government control in this vast Saharan nation in northwest Africa. The
Islamic radicals fought against the Malian army throughout the
afternoon and were seen roaming the streets and on rooftops in the
center of Gao, which has a population of 90,000. (Feb. 10)
The fighters involved in this round of clashes were thought to be from
the Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa (MOJWA). Since the
French were reported to have entered Gao on January 26, MOJWA has been
firing on their military units from outside the city.
French Gen. Bernard Barera claimed that the MOJWA combatants utilized
small boats to cross the Niger River into Gao. On February 9 a bomb was
detonated at a checkpoint near the entrance of the city.
Abdoul Abdoulaye Sidibe, a member of the Malian parliament based in the
capital of Bamako in the south of the country, said that MOJWA had held
Gao prior to the French intervention. In relationship to the battle that
began on February 10, Sidibe said that, “There was a whole group of
them who took up positions in front of the police station and started
firing in all directions.” (Globe and Mail, Feb. 10)
Just two days before on February 8, a reported suicide bomber driving a
motorcycle detonated explosives at the same entrance to Gao. During the
fighting on February 10, people remained in their homes to avoid injury
and no civilian casualties have been officially acknowledged.
During the clashes on February 10, a police station was taken over by
the MOJWA guerrillas. The next day, February 11, French combat
helicopters bombed the station in an effort to drive out the fighters.
French used its Air Force bumpers to kill Muslim Malian in the name of terrorists |
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