Please enter your login details

You can also sign in with your Sowetan LIVE
and Sport LIVE account details.
   Sign Up   Forgot password?

Sign in with:

 
  • All Share : 41003.25
    UNCHANGED0.00%
    Top 40 : 3403.86
    UNCHANGED0.00%
    Financial 15 : 11242.53
    UNCHANGED0.00%
    Industrial 25 : 47016.52
    UNCHANGED0.00%

  • ZAR/USD : 10.0014
    UP 0.01%
    ZAR/GBP : 15.6381
    UP 0.04%
    ZAR/EUR : 13.3927
    UP 0.04%
    ZAR/JPY : 0.1049
    UP 0.19%
    ZAR/AUD : 9.4815
    DOWN -0.07%

  • Gold : 1366.6800
    DOWN -0.10%
    Platinum : 1433.5000
    DOWN -0.38%
    Silver : 21.6400
    DOWN -0.12%
    Palladium : 707.0000
    UNCHANGED0.00%
    Brent Crude Oil : 106.000
    DOWN -0.02%

  • All data is delayed by 15 min. Data supplied by I-Net Bridge
    Hover cursor over this ticker to pause.

Wed Jun 19 06:55:53 SAST 2013

African leaders meet over resolution to take back Mali's north

Sapa-AP | 20 October, 2012 11:45
African Union Chief Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma (front L) and Mali's President Dioncounda Traore attend a high level international meeting in Bamako, October 19, 2012. Regional leaders joined international organisations in Bamako on Friday trying to narrow their differences over whether al Qaeda-linked Islamists in the north of Mali should be dislodged via military intervention or a more gradual political approach.
Image by: STRINGER / REUTERS

African leaders met in the capital of the troubled nation of Mali to prepare their plan for a military intervention to take back the nation's north, which was overrun by al Qaeda-linked rebels six months ago.

The high-level meeting comes after the United Nations Security Council passed a resolution last week giving Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon 45 days to help Mali develop a plan to recover the occupied territory.

The US, France and Britain have said they will offer logistical support, but the invasion needs to be led by African troops, and representatives from the nations bordering Mali were meeting to discuss the details.

The delegates drafted a document, outlining a strategy for the operation. It calls for the necessary arms and equipment to be provided to the Malian military by AU member states, as well as by international partners.

They also called for assistance in terms of expertise and help with training the Malian armed forces for the purpose of taking back the north.

A copy of the draft seen by The Associated Press provided few details about how the military operation would be carried out, or a timetable for the intervention. The document is being submitted to the African Union at their meeting in Addis Ababa on October 24, and once adopted, it will be sent back to the UN.

Jan Eliasson, the UN deputy secretary-general told the meeting delegates that whatever military action they decide to take "should not exacerbate existing tensions or worsen an already fragile humanitarian situation."

"Any military action must also support a coherent political strategy for the country's reunification. And for the international community to back an international military force, human rights and humanitarian law must be scrupulously respected," Eliasson said, according to a statement issued by the UN news agency.

The meeting brings together representatives from the body for nations in West Africa, the Economic Community of West African States, as well as the chair of the AU and envoys from the United Nations. On the sidelines of the meeting, African leaders pressed for a quick intervention, saying that too much time had already passed.

"This is a threat we cannot afford to take lightly, and the danger extends far beyond Africa," said Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, chairperson of the AU. "The sooner we deal with it, the better."

Mali's Interim President Dioncounda Traore spoke of the growing abuses in the north, where the Islamist groups have imposed Shariah law, banning music, and forcing women to cover themselves. A couple accused of adultery was stoned to death and at least seven accused thieves have had their hands amputated.

The Islamists have also pulverised the Unesco-listed World Heritage sites in the northern city of Timbuktu, arguing that the tombs of local saints amounted to idolatry.

"It's in Mali that we stone people to death. It's in Mali that we cut off people's hands. It's in Mali that we flog people in public. It's in Mali that we hit women. It's in Mali that we desecrate the tombs of the dead. This risks being a threat for the entire world," said Traore. "Help us help Mali so that it can once again become the solution and not a problem for its neighbours."

For decades up until this March, Mali was considered one of the only stable democracies in the region, a reputation it lost in a matter of hours when renegade soldiers led an impromptu coup on March 22.

In the chaos that followed, the military hierarchy was no longer respected, and the rebels in the country's north were able to push forward, seizing the three major provincial capitals. Initially they were led by a secular group that wanted to create an independent homeland for Mali's Tuaregs.

Their rebellion was hijacked by the Islamist groups, including al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, which became the de facto rulers of the north in June, after forcing the secular groups to beat a retreat.

The resolution adopted at the UN last week invokes Chapter Seven of the UN Charter, which opens the door to military intervention and enforcement of the council's decisions. It also calls for help from the EU to help train and assist the Malian army to retake the north.

SHARE YOUR OPINION

If you have an opinion you would like to share on this article, please send us an e-mail to the Times LIVE iLIVE team. In the mean time, click here to view the Times LIVE iLIVE section.