French-led troops in Mali have entered the historic city of Timbuktu, encountering little resistance, French and Malian military sources say. But there are reports of thousands of ancient manuscripts being destroyed, with video footage of the library showing charred books and empty boxes.Rico says that Timbuktu used to be considered the end of the world, but it's front and center now...
French President Francois Hollande declared that the joint forces were "winning this battle". They have been pushing north in their offensive against Islamist rebels. They seized Gao, northern Mali's biggest city, on Saturday. Islamists seized the north of the country last year, but have been losing ground since French forces launched an operation earlier this month.
Most militants appear to have moved out to desert hideouts, says the BBC's Thomas Fessy in the capital, Bamako. The advance came as African Union (AU) leaders met for a summit in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, the key issue at which was Mali.
The AU decided to contribute fifty million dollars to the multinational force, in what the BBC's James Copnall says is an attempt to start the ball rolling for what promises to be a costly operation.
A French military spokesman said troops had moved into Timbuktu. They were met by cheering crowds as they entered, waving French and Malian flags and shouting: Mali, Mali, Mali! "We are proud of France and proud of Mali. We thank you a thousand times," one resident said.
French troops seem to have been very successful in retaking the major towns that had been occupied by Islamist militants linked to al-Qaeda for months. But this rapid advance has mainly been made possible by the fact that most rebel fighters had left their positions in the few days preceding the French-led operations. Islamist combatants melted away with all their vehicles and weapons into desert hideouts. Hunting them down in this vast region they know better than any army will be much harder.
The French are hoping for a quick deployment of thousands more African forces but, without the experience of the terrain and the equipment, these troops will achieve nothing.
This second phase is likely to last months and the French may well be on the frontline longer than they have said in public. "We are independent again! We were held hostage for ten months, but it seemed like ten years," AFP news agency quoted resident Hama Cisse as saying. Meanwhile, a Malian army colonel told the agency: "The Malian army and the French army are in complete control of the city of Timbuktu."
But reports have emerged that militants had destroyed a library of ancient manuscripts, some dating back to the thirteenth century. Sky News correspondent Alex Crawford, who is with the joint forces, showed some charred documents and piles of empty boxes at the library said to have contained the manuscripts, and said vaults beneath the building had been emptied.
The library, the Ahmed Baba institute, held about thirty thousand manuscripts, and includes documents about centuries of life in the city, Mali and neighbouring countries.
French army spokesman Colonel Thierry Burkhard told the BBC earlier that "substantial airpower" had been used to support about a thousand French and two hundred Malian forces in their offensive against militants in Timbuktu. He said French forces had taken access points to the city during the night.
Once Timbuktu is secured, the French-led troops are expected to focus on the last rebel stronghold, Kidal, near the border with Algeria. But reports from the city, which is the home of the head of Ansar Dine, the main militant group in northern Mali, suggest that the group may have lost control there as well. The secular Tuareg rebel group, MNLA, said it had taken charge. AFP quoted a spokesman of an Ansar Dine breakaway faction as saying that it was jointly "ensuring security" with the MNLA.
Once Kidal is taken, the first phase of the French operation will be over; the second phase will be to track down the militants to their desert hideouts, which could prove a much more difficult task, he adds. Fabius warned that the militants had adopted a "strategy of evasion and some of them could return in the north".
President Hollande later outlined plans for the operation, saying African troops would take over once French forces had retaken key towns. The French would then return to their bases, and from then on their sole task would be to support and train Malian forces, he added. "Just as we went into action rapidly, we will draw back to the starting points," he said.
French officials said they now had 2,900 troops in Mali, backed by 2,700 African forces in Mali and neighbouring Chad. The African contingent is expected to be bolstered to 7,900, including 2,200 troops promised by Chad, The AP news agency quotes a Nigerian military official, Colonel Shehu Usman Abdulkadir, as saying.
28 January 2013
Not so obscure now
The BBC has an article by Thomas Fessy about the French in Timbuktu:
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