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Macron, Sahel leaders to review anti-jihad campaign
By Laurence Benhamou and Marie Wolfrom
Pau, France (AFP) Jan 13, 2020

The main jihadist attacks on G5 Sahel forces
Paris (AFP) Jan 13, 2020 - The forces of the G5 Sahel, whose leaders meet in Pau in southwestern France on Monday, have come increasingly under attack from jihadists they have been sent to fight.

Here are the main attacks over the past year:

- Niger -

- On January 9 this year, 89 soldiers are killed in an attack on a military camp at Chinegodar, in the western region of Tillaberi, near the border with Mali. During the attack 77 "terrorists" are "neutralised" according to Niger's authorities. It is the worst jihadist attack in Niger's history.

- On December 10, 2019, in the same region, 71 soldiers are killed in an attack claimed by the Islamic State group, which sees hundreds of jihadists attacked a camp near the border with Mali.

- On May 14, 28 soldiers are killed near Tillaberi in Niger's same border region with Mali and Burkina Faso after an ambush. The Islamic State claims responsibility.

- Mali -

- On November 18, 2019, 43 Malian soldiers are killed when their patrol is attacked at Tabankort, in the northeastern region of Menaka, as they were carrying out a joint operation with Niger forces.

- On November 1, in a jihadist raid on a military base at Indelim, in the eastern Menaka region near the border with Niger, gunmen shoot dead 49 Malian troops. The attack is claimed by Islamic State-allied militants.

- On September 30, 40 soldiers are killed at Mondoro and Boulkessy in central Mali at two military camps near the border with Burkina Faso. A Sahel-based Al-Qaeda-linked group, GSIM, claims responsibility.

- On March 17, 26 are killed in a military camp at Dioura in central Mali, in an attack also claimed by GSIM.

- Burkina Faso -

- On December 24, 2019, an attack on the military base and northern city of Arbinda by some 200 heavily armed jihadists leaves seven soldiers dead along with 35 civilians. It is the worst jihadist attack in the country for five years.

- On August 19, 2019, 24 soldiers die during a "major attack" on a military base at Koutougou in northern Burkina Faso, near the border with Mali. It is the deadliest strike against the Burkinabe military.

- Chad -

- On March 22, 2019, 23 Chadian soldiers are killed in southwestern Chad when they come under attack from Boko Haram jihadists on their position at Dangdala. It is one of the most deadly attacks suffered by the Chadian army since the beginning of the anti-Islamist fight.

French President Emmanuel Macron on Monday hosts counterparts from five Sahel countries to reassess their joint fight against a mounting jihadist revolt as France's military role is being questioned in the region.

Tensions between France and officials from Burkina Faso, Chad, Niger, Mali and Mauritania could make for a tricky exchange at the talks in Pau, southwest France.

The city was home to seven of 13 soldiers killed in a helicopter collision in Mali last month, the deadliest one-day military loss for France in nearly four decades.

The leaders will attend a memorial service for the soldiers before beginning their talks at 4:30 pm (1530 GMT), which will also be attended by UN chief Antonio Guterres as well as the heads of the African Union and the EU Council.

A press conference is scheduled afterward, followed by a dinner.

Macron insists the Sahel leaders must use the occasion to publicly reiterate their support for France's military presence -- by far the largest foreign contribution to the fight against extremists aligned with Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State group.

Visiting the region last month, Macron complained of a lack of "clear political condemnation of anti-French feelings" on the ground, saying he was loath to send soldiers to countries where their presence was not "clearly wanted."

On Saturday, Defence Minister Florence Parly was blunter: "We need to determine a clear position from political leaders on what they want or not," she told France Inter radio, noting that 41 French soldiers have been killed in the Sahel region since 2013.

Jihadist fighters have recently stepped up their campaign against military and civilian targets, with Guterres warning this month that "terrorist groups are gaining ground."

On Thursday, 89 soldiers are killed in an attack on a military camp at Chinegodar in Niger, near the border with Mali, the worst jihadist attack in its history.

- 'Down with France' -

On Friday, hundreds of people gathered in the Malian capital Bamako to protest the presence of the 4,500 soldiers in France's Barkhane operation, carrying posters reading "Down with France, Barkhane must leave" and "France is a brake on our development."

Despite the French presence and a 13,000-member UN peacekeeping force in Mali dubbed MINUSMA, the conflict that erupted in the north of that country in 2012 has since spread to its neighbours, especially Burkina Faso and Niger.

Thousands of civilians have been killed and more than a million displaced, with hundreds of troops dead, including dozens of French ones.

Macron has already called to clarify "political and strategic framework" of the Sahel fight in his talks with Mali's Ibrahim Boubacar Keita, Burkina Faso's Roch Marc Christian Kabore, Niger's Mahamadou Issoufou, Mauritania's Mohamed Ould Ghazouani and Chad's Idriss Deby.

Mali's Keita has said the summit will be "decisive" and "will allow us to put on the table all the questions, all the grievances, all the solutions".

But he insisted the G5 leaders would demand a "respectable and respectful relationship" with France -- Kabore of Burkina Faso described Macron's recent insistences as "lacking in tact".

- 'All options on the table' -

Macron ordered a review of the Barkhane operation after the Mali helicopter disaster, saying "all options are on the table," implying a potential drawdown of French troops.

France has long complained that only Britain and the US have provided support for the operation, deploring the lack of significant contributions from EU allies.

Last year, only $300 million (269 million euros) of $400 million pledged by the international community in cash and material support to the Sahel was delivered, according to the French presidency.

France may also be facing the prospect of losing American help, after The New York Times reported in December that the Pentagon would reduce troop levels in Africa, or even withdraw them completely.

NGOs on Friday urged that civilians caught in the crossfire not be forgotten at Monday's talks.

"The military response in the Sahel is part of the problem," said Maureen Magee of the Norwegian Refugee Council.

"Last year, military operations in Mali have pushed more than 80,000 people to flee. Engagement in the Sahel must put the protection of the populations at the heart of the response."

elb-mw/mlr/js/ri

THE NEW YORK TIMES COMPANY


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Chinese FM wraps up five-nation African tour
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Chinese Foreign minister Wang Yi on Monday wrapped up a five-nation Africa tour after talks in Zimbabwe in which he pledged to strengthen cooperation despite a spat over aid figures. Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa on Monday said, "he (Wang) goes back home satisfied that our relations are on a solid foundation." "We as Zimbabweans are happy with our relations with China," Mnangagwa told reporters in the capital Harare. Wang's week-long swing also took him to Egypt, Djibouti, Eritrea ... read more

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