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Canada to deploy troops, helicopters to help UN in Mali
by Staff Writers
Ottawa (AFP) March 19, 2018

Tunisian man chased by police 'blows himself up': ministry
Tunis (AFP) March 19, 2018 - A Tunisian man "blew himself up" as he was being chased Monday by police in a border region near Libya and his companion was shot dead, the interior ministry said.

Spokesman Khalifa Chibani told AFP the National Guard had received information concerning "two male suspects" in the southern Ben Guerdane region.

They tracked them down in the Magroun area, a desert zone near a nature reserve, and tried to arrest them but "one of them blew himself up," he said.

Chibani said both suspects wore explosive vests, and had currency from chaos-wracked Libya, grenades and ammunition. "It is probable that they were planning to go to Libya," he told AFP.

He said they could be two jihadists sought by authorities over connections to the Jund al-Khilafa group, Arabic for "Soldiers of the Caliphate", which has pledged allegiance to the Islamic State (IS) group.

One of the suspects, he said, was armed with a Kalashnikov assault rifle and had opened fire on the police.

After an exchange of fire, security forces "shot dead the second terrorist", the interior ministry said, adding that the National Guard and the army were searching the area.

He said an investigation had been opened and would determine if the first suspect who blew himself up had activated his explosives vest or if it blew up in the exchange of fire with the security forces.

Since its 2011 revolution, Tunisia has faced a jihadist insurgency responsible for the deaths of dozens of soldiers, police, civilians and foreign tourists.

Tunisia has been under a state of emergency since November 2015, when a suicide bombing in Tunis claimed by the IS killed 12 presidential guards.

Monday's incident comes after a series of deadly operations in 2015 and two years after an IS offensive on the town of Ben Guerdane.

On March 7, 2016, jihadists launched brazen attacks on the town that killed 13 members of the security forces and seven civilians and also left 55 fighters dead.

Prime Minister Youssef Chahed this month marked the anniversary of the Ben Guerdane attacks and said he wanted to "consecrate March 7 as a national day of victory against terrorism" and Ben Guerdane as "the town of victory against terrorism".

Thousands of Tunisians have joined jihadist groups fighting in Iraq, Syria and neighbouring Libya.

Canada will deploy an infantry unit and military trainers along with attack and transport helicopters to Mali for 12 months in support of an ongoing UN peacekeeping mission, the government announced Monday.

"The task force will include two Chinook helicopters to provide much-needed transport and logistics capability, as well as four armed Griffin helicopters for armed escort and protection," Defense Minister Harjit Sajjan told a news conference.

A date for Canada's first military deployment in Africa since its troubled missions to Rwanda and Somalia in the 1990s and the exact number of troops that will be sent have yet to be decided, he added.

The pledge comes after Ottawa said last November it would send a Hercules aircraft to the UN regional support center in Entebbe, Uganda, which backs UN operations throughout Africa, as well as make available to the UN a rapid response force of 200 soldiers -- marking Canada's recommitment to multilateralism.

Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland said the unit heading to Mali would include women soldiers to meet a demand for gender perspectives in securing peace and security in hotspots.

"One of our priorities is to increase women's participation in peacekeeping," she said.

Women currently account for only 3.7 percent of military peacekeepers and 9.5 percent of police peacekeepers. The UN is seeking to double the number of women in peacekeeping roles by 2020.

Mali is one of the most dangerous UN missions, with more than 150 peacekeepers killed since 2013. Once a beacon of democracy and stability in Africa the country has been underminded by a coup, civil war and terrorism.

Two senior Canadian diplomats were also kidnapped and held hostage in northern Mali in 2009.

- Outbreaks of violence -

Islamic extremists linked to Al-Qaeda took control of Mali's desert north in early 2012, but were largely driven out in a French-led military operation launched in January 2013.

In June 2015, Mali's government signed a peace agreement with some armed groups, but the jihadists remain active, and large tracts of the country are lawless.

In recent months, jihadists have ramped up their activities in central Mali, targeting domestic and foreign forces in outbreaks of violence once confined to the country's north.

Four United Nations peacekeepers were killed and four wounded in late February when a mine exploded under their vehicle in central Mali.

In response, Mali, Chad, Burkina Faso, Niger and Mauritania formed the so-called G5 Sahel force to re-establish control in lawless frontier regions in the Sahel, south of the Sahara, where terror groups have been able to flourish. Its numbers are expected to swell to 5,000 in the coming months.

The Mali peacekeeping mission, known by the acronym MINUSMA, currently has 12,000 military personnel and 1,900 police.

They have been deployed in Mali since 2013 to counter the jihadist insurgency and general lawlessness.

The Canadians, according to Sajjan, will conduct reconnaissance, facilitate medical evacuations for the 57 UN partner nations already on the ground in Mali, and help plan missions in the country.

Military helicopters are being deployed because they are less vulnerable to attack.

"We are very aware of the complexities and the difficulties of the situation in Mali. Indeed, it is the complexity and the difficulty of the situation there which requires a UN peacekeeping force," Freeland said.

"Canada has capabilities that other countries do not have, and that is why we can really make a difference in this region," she added.

Canada currently has only 25 soldiers tasked to UN missions and had faced pressure to commit troops to Mali, where there is a desperate need for French-speaking peacekeepers.

Canada is the third largest development aid donor to Mali, after France and the United States, with about Can$100 million sent to the country each year.

Canadian mining firms have also invested more than Can$1 billion in the country.


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