UK
to aid France in Mali intervention
The
British prime minister welcomed France’s decision
to intervene in the North African country to
help the Malian army halt a rebel advance towards the capital Bamako.
Britain has announced it will provide France with logistical support during its Mali intervention as French forces stepped up airstrikes against Islamist militants fighting government troops.
"The
Prime Minister has agreed that the UK will provide logistical
military assistance to help transport foreign troops and equipment
quickly to Mali,"
David Cameron's office said in a statement on Saturday, adding that
London is not going to deploy British personnel in a combat role.
Over
100 Islamist militants have been killed as Malian troops backed by
the French military fought for control of the strategic town of
Konna.
Meanwhile,
Paris announced on Saturday that a French pilot had been killed in an
air raid over Konna. "During
this intense combat, one of our pilots… was fatally
wounded," French
Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said in a statement. The pilot
was wounded during the operation and later died in hospital, the
minister said.
This
comes just two days after France sent hundreds of troops to its
former colony. The West African regional bloc ECOWAS, will begin
sending troops to Mali on Monday.
French
airstrikes overnight pushed back Islamist rebels from Konna and
destroyed a rebel command center, Le Drian said.
The
deployment of French troops has been met with anger from Islamist
group Ansar Dine, which said the move will have “consequences
for French citizens in the Muslim world.”
Ansar Dine is fighting on the frontline of the battle of Konna.
“We
are actually in Konna for the jihad [holy war],"
an Ansar Dine spokesperson told AFP on Friday.
French
President Francois Hollande says the country will raise its domestic
terror threat level as a result of the military operations. He
promised to increase protection at public buildings and
transportation networks.
France
decided to take military action after a plea from Mali’s president,
and says the intervention will last as long as necessary. However,
many critics say France may have had its own motivations for
deploying troops in the country.
“There
is that much at stake financially and strategically in Mali. But on
the other hand this is the sort of intervention that could drag on
for very long time. I think what triggered it was the move by the
Islamist rebels towards Bamako, which is the capital where most of
the French citizens are.Most of them are located at the southern end
of the country and I think Hollande felt he had to do something to
protect them.” France-based
independent journalist Robert Harneis told RT.
On
Thursday, the
UN Security Council called for “rapid deployment” of
international forces in Mali to
combat the Islamist militants in the north of the country.
Given
the latest developments in the West African country, the members of
the UNSC “expressed
their determination to pursue the full implementation”
of its resolutions on Mali, in particular Resolution 2085, adopted in
December, which authorizes the deployment of over 3,000 African-led
international troops.
The
support force approved by the UN had not been expected to be deployed
until September 2013.
Ansar
Dine and Mujao have controlled most of northern Mali since last
April. They formed an alliance with Tuareg rebels following a
military coup in March.
However,
their alliance quickly collapsed, with the Islamists capturing the
area's urban centers and marginalizing the Tuareg rebels.
The
Islamists have been accused of war crimes and attempting to impose
strict Sharia law throughout the region, harboring fears that the
area could soon become a hub for al-Qaeda linked militants.
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