Sunday, April 1, 2012

Mali rebels attack northern town in coup aftermath

A man holds up a sign reading 'Long live the CNRDRE,' the acronym by which the ruling military junta is known, during a rally in support that was attended by roughly one thousand people in a stadium with a capacity of 50,000, in Bamako, Mali Saturday, March 31, 2012. The March 26 stadium is named in commemoration of the date in 1991 when dictator Moussa Traore was overthrown, paving the way for establishment of a democracy which lasted 21 years until mutinous soldiers took power in a coup nine days ago. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

A man holds up a sign reading 'Long live the CNRDRE,' the acronym by which the ruling military junta is known, during a rally in support that was attended by roughly one thousand people in a stadium with a capacity of 50,000, in Bamako, Mali Saturday, March 31, 2012. The March 26 stadium is named in commemoration of the date in 1991 when dictator Moussa Traore was overthrown, paving the way for establishment of a democracy which lasted 21 years until mutinous soldiers took power in a coup nine days ago. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

A banner reads 'Mali, indivisible,' at a rally in support of the ruling military junta attended by roughly one thousand people in a stadium with a capacity of 50,000, in Bamako, Mali Saturday, March 31, 2012. The March 26 stadium is named in commemoration of the date in 1991 when dictator Moussa Traore was overthrown, paving the way for establishment of a democracy which lasted 21 years until mutinous soldiers took power in a coup nine days ago. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

A man walks in front of a wall painted in the colors of the Malian flag, during a rally in support of the ruling military junta attended by roughly one thousand people in a stadium with a capacity of 50,000, in Bamako, Mali Saturday, March 31, 2012. The March 26 stadium is named in commemoration of the date in 1991 when dictator Moussa Traore was overthrown, paving the way for establishment of a democracy which lasted 21 years until mutinous soldiers took power in a coup nine days ago. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

People cheer during a rally in support of the ruling military junta, attended by roughly one thousand people in a stadium with a capacity of 50,000, in Bamako, Mali Saturday, March 31, 2012. The March 26 stadium is named in commemoration of the date in 1991 when dictator Moussa Traore was overthrown, paving the way for establishment of a democracy which lasted 21 years until mutinous soldiers took power in a coup nine days ago. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

A man wearing a traditional hat arrives at a rally in support of the ruling military junta, attended by roughly 1000 people in a stadium with a capacity of 50,000, in Bamako, Mali Saturday, March 31, 2012. The March 26 stadium is named in commemoration of the date in 1991 when dictator Moussa Traore was overthrown, paving the way for establishment of a democracy which lasted 21 years until mutinous soldiers took power in a coup nine days ago. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

(AP) ? Rebels on Saturday attacked Mali's strategic northern city of Gao, a day after they took the provincial capital of Kidal, witnesses and an official said. The move deepens the crisis in the landlocked nation at the feet of the Sahara after a coup earlier this month by Malian soldiers angry at the government's handling of the rebellion.

The two towns are major prizes for the Tuareg rebels, who launched an insurgency in January fueled by the flow of arms from the fall of neighboring Libya, where many of the rebels had been on the payroll of Moammar Gadhafi.

Gao is around 1,200 kilometers (almost 750 miles) from the capital of Bamako, where junior officers overthrew the elected government and claimed power 10 days ago.

The countries neighboring Mali have condemned the coup and have given the military junta a 72-hour deadline, which expires on Monday, to hand power back to civilians or face crippling sanctions. On Saturday, the junta sent a delegation to meet with the president of neighboring Burkina Faso. The representative of the junta, Col. Moussa Coulibaly, told reporters afterwards that they were "leaving feeling confident and we hope we will quickly reach a consensus on how to restore the institutions of the state in a way that will be acceptable to the whole world."

Coulibaly also said that the junta has no intention of holding on to power. Back in Bamako, the leader of the coup Capt. Amadou Haya Sanogo met late Saturday with Burkina's foreign affairs minister. Sanogo emerged to say that "the conclusions are very positive," though he refused to elaborate.

However, a senior official in one of the nations neighboring Mali said that he spoke by telephone on Saturday to Sanogo who proposed that he should remain president during a transitional period leading up to elections. Sanogo added that he would head a government where all the other members would be civilians, not soldiers, the official said.

The official, who could not be named because of the sensitivity of the matter, said that "his proposal is unacceptable" and that there must be a clear-cut return to constitutional rule.

Sanogo claimed that he seized power because of the government's inability to handle the insurgency in the north. Instead since the March 21 coup, the rebels have taken one of the three main towns in the north and are on the verge of taking the second, while the third remains on high alert.

A soldier at the Gao garrison reached by telephone said heavy fighting continued Saturday afternoon and that the army had scrambled helicopter gunships that were bombarding rebel positions. A convoy of 14 army pickup trucks were seen retreating from the town, according to Sidi Amar, a resident of Gossi, around 160 kilometers (nearly 100 miles) from Gao.

If Gao falls, the only other major city in Mali's north in government hands would be Timbuktu.

Baba Bore, a radio programmer at the local Radio Alfarouk station in the ancient city of Timbuktu, said gunshots were heard earlier in the day. The families of soldiers stationed at the city's camps had evacuated, fearing a possible attack.

Ivory Coast President Alassane Ouattara, chair of the Economic Community of West African States, or ECOWAS, said he has put 2,000 West African troops on alert. The regional body has threatened to use military force if the junta refuses to leave. Ouattara indicated the bloc might also be willing to use force to dislodge the rebels.

"Our wish is to avoid war," he said in an interview Saturday on Ivorian television. "We must do everything possible to preserve the territorial integrity of Mali."

The Tuareg rebels that have seized control of much of the north are a cloudy amalgam of different factions. They include a secular group known as the National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad, or NMLA, whose stated aim is to carve out a Tuareg homeland in the north. There is also an Islamic faction which wants to impose Sharia law in the north.

Already there are signs of disunity among the rebels. A man who fled Kidal said the Islamist rebels had taken down all the flags of the NMLA in that city. He said they were going around demanding that shopkeepers take down posters considered to reflect Western culture. A hairdresser said he was forced to remove photos of unveiled women that he displayed to show different hairstyles. The resident spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals against family members still in Kidal.

The nearly three-month-old insurgency has cost the lives of dozens of Malian soldiers who were sent to fight the separatists, often without enough ammunition. Last week, soldiers at a garrison in the Kati capital began shooting in the air in a mutiny over the treatment of their brothers-in-arms.

The mutiny spread to other garrisons and by the evening of March 21, the country's democratically elected leader had fled the presidential palace.

Mali is now facing severe economic sanctions over the coup. If the junta does not hand power to civilians by Monday, ECOWAS has said that they will close the country's land borders and freeze its account in the regional central bank.

Sanogo, the coup leader, has said that he "understands" the position of the regional body, but begged Mali's neighbors to deepen their analysis and to examine the reasons that led to the coup.

At a stadium in the capital, several hundred people were bussed in by political parties supporting the putschists for a pro-coup rally. Mali was considered one of the few established democracies in the region, and last week's takeover has erased 21 years of democratic gains.

Those supporting the coup say that Mali's democratic reputation is an illusion, pointing to the widespread corruption that characterized the toppled regime. They held up signs that said: "No to the facade of democracy."

___

Associated Press writers Baba Ahmed and Martin Vogl in Bamako, Michelle Faul in Niamey, Niger, and Brahima Ouedraogo in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, contributed to this report.

Associated Press

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