The Star Malaysia

Malian troops reclaim Konna

French-backed forces wrest control of key town from al-qaeda-linked rebels

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BAMAKO: The Malian army, backed by French troops, wrested control of the central town of Konna from terrorists as the first West African regional forces arrived to shore up the offensive against the al-Qaeda-linked rebels.

The retaking of the key town, yesterday, about 700km from here, came amid a crisis in neighbouri­ng Algeria where terrorists took hundreds hostage in a gas field, sparking a deadly commando raid, to avenge the French interventi­on in Mali.

“We have wrested total control of Konna after inflicting heavy losses on the enemy,” the Malian army said in a brief statement. The claim was backed by a regional security source and local residents.

Rebel groups who have controlled northern Mali since April pushed south into government-held territory and seized Konna on Jan 10, spurring former colonial ruler France to launch a military campaign to halt their advance.

The French forces began with air strikes under the Operation Serval campaign but rapidly extended it to a ground offensive on a triad of al-Qaeda-linked rebels who gained control of the country’s vast desert north.

France said it already has 1,400 soldiers in Mali and this will progressiv­ely be increased to 2,500 troops.

About 100 Togolese and Nigerian soldiers arrived in Mali late Thursday, the first African troops pledged by nine regional countries to boost the French-led effort.

The regional Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas) has pledged to send 3,000 soldiers for the Misma (Internatio­nal Mission for Support to Mali) in line with a United Nations resolution.

Chad, which is not an Ecowas member, has also offered to send 2,000 soldiers.

The force will be headed by Nigerian General Shehu Abdulkadir and some 2,000 soldiers are expected in Mali by Jan 26.

West African countries will review the crisis at an emergency meeting on Mali on Saturday in Abidjan, the main city of Ivory Coast. French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius is due to attend.

The recapture of Konna is a significan­t boost for the Malian army which has struggled to drive out the rebels.

They had claimed to have taken it earlier but French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian then said the zone was still in the rebels’ hands.

On Tuesday Aboul Habib Sidi Mohamed, a spokesman for one of the rebel groups Ansar Dine (Defenders of the Faith), said they were still in control of the town.

The area is not accessible to independen­t observers.

The UN special envoy for the Sahel, Romano Prodi, said the French air and ground interventi­on in Mali was the only way to stop the rebels from creating “a terrorist safe haven in the heart of Africa“.

Further support for France, which has already won offers of logistical help from several European countries, came Friday from Italy and Poland, whose defence minister said Warsaw could send instructor­s to train Mali’s embattled troops after European foreign ministers on Thursday agreed to accelerate the deployment of an EU training force to the country. — AFP

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