BAMAKO, Mali
The Malian military launched air strikes Wednesday near a village that witnesses said had been seized by extremists with ties to the Islamic State group.
Witnesses reported the
takeover of Talataye, in Mali’s northern Gao region, on Tuesday. The
development has renewed fears extremists would again expand their reach
following the Aug. 15 departure of French troops last after nearly a decade of
battling insurgents.
“Islamic State fighters
attacked our position in the village of Talataye and our fighting unit finally
withdrew from the village,” said Fahad Ag Almahmoud, secretary general of
GATIA, an umbrella organization representing formerly armed groups that signed
a peace agreement with the Malian government.
But Almahmoud said it’s
unclear whether the militants control the village following the air strikes.Col. Assimi Goita
“Last we heard, the Islamic
State fighters took control of the village all night, but this morning there
were air strikes by the Malian army on the site. At this moment, we still don’t
know if they are still in the village or if they have withdrawn,” he said.
Extremist groups have in the
past briefly seized towns and vilages. In September 2016, al-Qaeda-linked
fighters took control of the central town of Boni before abandoning the town a
day after the attack. Last month Islamic State-linked militants briefly took
control of the town of Tessit in the Menaka region.
But some observers fear that
the Malian army and its U.N. allies will be unable to keep extremists from
regaining power without French military support.
In 2012, extremists seized
power in major towns across Mali’s north, implementing strict Islamic law known
as Shariah that included amputating the hands of suspected thieves and publicly
whipping women for wearing clothing deemed too revealing.
The extremists fled into the
surrounding desert when former colonial power France launched a military
intervention in 2013. They have spent the last decade attacking the Malian
military and a U.N. peacekeeping force trying to stabilize the country.
Frustration with the attacks
helped fuel support for coup leader Col. Assimi Goita, who overthrew Mali’s
democratically elected president two years ago. Goita and his junta assured
Malians that they would do a better job of beating back the insurgents. But
spiraling tensions between Goita and France resulted in last month’s pullout of
2,400 French troops. - AP
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