(Source BBC)
When News Breaks Out, We Break In. Minute by Minute Report on Cameroon and Africa
The African Union's chairman
Thomas Boni Yayi has called for Nato to send forces to Mali to help fight
militant Islamists who have captured the north.
Islamist Rebels taking control of the North |
The Malian conflict was an
"international question" and Nato should intervene just as it had
done in Afghanistan, Mr Yayi said.
However, the campaign against
the militants should be led by an African force, he said.
The UN last month approved
plans to send some 3,000 African troops to Mali.
UN officials said they did not
expect the force to be deployed before September.
Mr Yayi, who is Benin's
president, called for Nato intervention after talks with Canadian Prime
Minister Stephen Harper in Ottawa.
"Nato should play a part
and the African force would lead the way as was done by Nato in
Afghanistan," he said. "This is an international situation." Nato
took command of the international peacekeeping force in Afghanistan in 2003. Several
Nato members, including the US and France, say they will help to train an
African force for the Mali operation, but have not offered to send ground
troops or launch air strikes.
Mr Harper said Canada - a Nato
member - was not considering direct military involvement in Mali.
"Obviously we are very
concerned about the situation, and the development of essentially an entire
terrorist region is of grave concern to everybody in the international
community," he said.
The Islamists and Tuareg
rebels seized power in northern Mali - an area the size of France - in the
chaos following a coup in the capital, Bamako last year.
Their ranks had been bolstered
by fighters from Libya, who crossed into Mali after the overthrow of Colonel
Muammar Gaddafi's government in 2011.
A Nato bombing campaign helped
Libya's militias to oust Col Gaddafi's government.
The alliance between the
Islamists and Tuareg groups quickly collapsed, with the Islamists taking the
region's main urban centres.
The Islamist groups have since
destroyed ancient shrines in Timbuktu and imposed a strict interpretation of
Islamic law, sparking international outrage.
Burkina Faso's government is
trying to mediate an end to the conflict.
It is due to host talks
between the Islamists, Tuareg rebels and the Malian government in the Burkinabe
capital, Ouagadougou, on Friday.
When News Breaks Out, We Break In. Minute by Minute Report on Cameroon and Africa
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