Mali: French troops set for ground combat
2013-01-16 15:04
Bamako - French troops will be in direct combat against
Islamist fighters in Mali within "hours", the country's army chief
said on Wednesday, as France's ground forces pushed north towards rebel-held
territory in the six-day old offensive.
"The ground operation began several hours ago,"
Admiral Edouard Guillaud told Europe 1 radio. "In the coming hours -
though I cannot say for sure if it will be one, or 72 hours - we will be in
direct combat," he added.
A first contingent of 190 Nigerian troops was due to arrive
in Bamako on Wednesday as part of a regional force of over 3 000 soldiers from
Benin, Ghana, Niger, Senegal, Burkina Faso and Togo, to shore up the French air
and ground offensive launched on 11 January.
As French armoured units and Malian government forces headed
north, a detachment was sent to secure a strategic bridge on the Niger river
near the town of Markala in western Mali which leads to the capital Bamako.
"Our mission is to hold this bridge to prevent the
enemy from accessing the south," said Colonel Frederic of the 21st marine
infantry regiment from Chad. He asked that his full name not be used.
A military source said the Islamists were some 80km north of
Markala, putting them around 350km away from Bamako.
A convoy of armoured vehicles were also reported by a local
government official to be heading to the town of Diabaly, which al Qaeda-linked
groups seized earlier this week.
French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian confirmed that
the troops, whose number is set to triple from 800 at present to 2 500 men,
faced a long and tough battle against determined fighters whose number he
estimated at up to 1 300.
Logistical support
"It's a little more difficult in the west, where we
have the toughest, most fanatical and best-organised groups. It's under way
there but it's difficult," he said.
President Francois Hollande vowed his forces would crush the
Islamist militia.
"What do we plan to do with the terrorists? Destroy
them. Capture them, if possible and make sure that they can do no harm in the
future," he said on Tuesday during a visit to the United Arab Emirates.
West African army chiefs in Bamako were expected to resume
talks on Wednesday on the roll-out of the UN-mandated regional intervention
force in the former French colony.
Mali has been effectively split in two since March 2012,
when Islamists took advantage of a short-lived coup in Bamako and an offensive
launched by Tuareg separatists in the north to seize half of the country.
Western countries had voiced fears that Mali's north - a
desert region larger than France - could become al-Qaeda's leading global safe
haven and be used to launch attacks on targets in Europe.
However, a proposed African-led intervention remained mired
in indecision after months of planning, and the Islamists last week pushed into
the government-held south, seizing the town of Konna.
The advance on the capital prompted France to intervene, a
decision which has been widely supported at home and in the international
community, which has offered logistical support but no military back-up on the
ground.
Aboul Habib Sidi Mohamed, a spoksperson for one of the Islamic
rebel groups Ansar Dine (Defenders of Faith) which seized Konna, said their
goal was "to protect the population" after a failure to negotiate
with government.
'Jihadists in it for
the long haul'
Faced with the French air offensive, Islamists have fled key
northern stronghold towns, including ones where they had imposed their brutal
version of Islamic law.
But analysts have warned the withdrawal was likely a
tactical move.
"The jihadists are in it for the long-haul. They are
comfortable in this situation: the vast desert, a difficult terrain, a
precarious security situation," said Tunisian Islamist expert Alaya
Allani.
One resident in the northern town of Gao reported that the
Islamists had cut telecommunication links late Tuesday, rendering land lines
and mobile phones useless.
"They accuse residents of giving information to the [French] soldiers," he told AFP by satellite phone.
The UN and aid agencies have also expressed fears for
civilians caught up in the conflict.
So far 144 500 refugees have fled the unrest to neighbouring
Mauritania, Niger, Burkina Faso and Algeria, the UN humanitarian agency said
on Tuesday, while another 230,000 were internally displaced.
Belgium offered two C-130 transport planes and two
helicopters to back up France's offensive, while Britain and Canada have
offered troop transporters. Germany is considering logistical or humanitarian
support.
Hollande stressed however that French troops would not be in
Mali for good but would stay until security had been restored and the
"terrorists" eliminated.
At home, France has deployed 700 troops in and around Paris,
indicating mounting concern over potential reprisal attacks after threats by
the Islamists to "strike at the heart" of France.
- SAPA