Militants in U.N. disguise explode car bombs, rockets at Mali bases

Militants in U.N. disguise explode car bombs, rockets at Mali bases

by Joseph Anthony
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UN peacekeepers stand guard in the northern town of Kouroume, Mali, May 13, 2015. Kourome is 18 km (11 miles) south of Timbuktu. REUTERS/Adama Diarra

Militants disguised as U.N. peacekeepers exploded two suicide car bombs and fired dozens of rockets at the French and United Nations bases in Maliโ€™s northern city of Timbuktu on Saturday, killing one and wounding many, Malian authorities said.

The U.N. mission confirmed that the complex attack had killed a U.N. peacekeeper. The Malian government said in addition that 10 French soldiers had been wounded, but the French mission did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

โ€œTerrorists wearing blue helmets aboard two cars laden with explosives, including one in the colours of the Malian army and another with a โ€˜UNโ€™ written in it, attempted to infiltrate these camps,โ€ the Malian government statement said.

โ€œThe situation is now under control.โ€

U.N. peacekeeping and French military forces stationed in northern Mali have been under near-constant attack over the past year by determined and well-armed jihadist groups seen as the gravest threat to security across Africaโ€™s Sahel region.

But even by the standards of Maliโ€™s increasingly emboldened Islamist fighters, Saturdayโ€™s attempted breach of two foreign bases at once was ambitious.

โ€œMINUSMA confirms a significant complex attack on its camp in Timbuktu mortars, exchange of fire, vehicle suicide bomb attack,โ€ the mission tweeted. โ€œOne blue helmet was killed in the exchange of fire.โ€

The United Nations last month said 162 people deployed in Mali have been killed since 2013, making it the worldโ€™s deadliest peacekeeping operation to date.

A 2015 peace deal signed by Maliโ€™s government and separatist groups has failed to end violence in northern Mali by Islamists, who have also staged assaults on high-profile targets in the capital, Bamako, Burkina Faso and Ivory Coast.

French forces intervened in 2013 to drive back Islamist fighters who had hijacked a Tuareg uprising a year earlier, and some 4,000 French troops remain. The U.N. Security Council then deployed peacekeepers to the country, but they have been targets of a concerted guerrilla campaign.

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