French soldiers in Mali |
Bamako, MALI
French military forces in Mali have killed Ali
Maychou, the head of a West African Islamic extremist group, France's defense
ministry said on Tuesday.
French Defense Minister, Florence Parly, said
via Twitter that Maychou, the second in command of the of Jama'at
Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM) extremist group, was killed on October 9.
"Ali Maychou, a religious leader, recruiter
and mastermind of several attacks, incited hate," Parly wrote.
Maychou was a former radical Imam who was added to
international sanctions list by the United Nations for his links to the
so-called "Islamic State" (IS) militant group and al-Qaeda.
Ali Maychou |
France, the former colonial power in the region,
has been fighting against JNIM and other extremist groups in Mali and
other countries in Africa's Sahel region, a sparsely-populated area south
of the Sahara which stretches from the Atlantic Ocean to the Red Sea. JNIM is
responsible for attacks on Malian and French troops as well as UN peacekeepers.
Violence by Islamist militants has proliferated in
the Sahel in recent years, with many groups linked to al-Qaeda and IS. The
groups use central and northern Mali as a launch pad for attacks across the
region.
Last week, at least 53 soldiers were killed in a
terror attack in the Indelimane area of Mali near the border with Niger. IS,
whose leader Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi was recently
killed in Syria, claimed responsibility for the attack.
Some 50 nations currently deploy more than 13,000
soldiers and 1,700 police in Mali. Germany has 840 soldiers in the West African
country, though its mandate for the Bundeswehr as part of the UN peacekeeping
mission MINUSMA allows for 1,100. - DW
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