BAMAKO, Mali
Twin attacks have left at least five soldiers dead in Mali, a Sahel country mired in a political crisis that has sparked international concern.
Soldiers of the Malian army patrolling the old town of Djenne in central Mali |
Five soldiers were killed
and five others wounded in an ambush on a military convoy and an artillery
attack on a camp on Sunday, both attacks blamed on rebel fighters in central
Mali, army and local sources said.
The bloodshed came some six
weeks after rebel fighters ambushed a military convoy, also in central Mali,
killing 24 soldiers.
Fighters unleashed a revolt
in northern Mali in 2012 that has since spread to the centre of the poor
country and to neighbouring Burkina Faso and Niger despite the presence of
thousands of French and UN troops.
The latest attacks came as
President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita faces insistent calls to resign from an
opposition angry over the brutal conflict as well as dire economic conditions
and perceived corruption.
Much of the current tension
was sparked in April when the Constitutional Court tossed out 31 results from
long-delayed parliamentary elections - a move that benefitted Keita's party.
The so-called June 5 Movement
(M5-RFP) has continued to insist on Keita's departure, despite two mediation
missions by the regional bloc ECOWAS that has suggested a new unity government
and a resolution to the election quarrel.
M5-RFP has said it would resume acts of "civil disobedience" on Monday after observing a truce for the Eid al-Adha festival, a key Muslim holiday that began on Friday.
No comments:
Post a Comment