Mali defence minister killed as country hit by wave of rebel attacks
Mali defence minister killed as country hit by wave of rebel attacks Mali's defence minister has been killed in an apparent suicide truck bombing on his residence near the capital Bamako. Multiple news outlets reported the death of Sadio Camara, part of a wave of coordinated attacks by jihadist militants and separatists carried out across the country. State TV confirmed the death several hours later, saying he died of wounds received while engaging with the attackers.
Further north Russian mercenaries hired by Mali's military agreed to withdraw from Kidal after two days of clashes, the separatist Azawad Liberation Front (FLA) group said. For years, Mali has been plagued by insurgencies by groups affiliated with al-Qaeda and the Islamic State group, and the FLA. Quoting Camara's family and French media, news agencies said the attack - launched by militants affiliated with al-Qaeda in Kati on Saturday - also killed at least three of Camara's family members.
It said he exchanged fire with the attackers and "succeeded in neutralising some of them".
However, he was wounded and later died from his injuries in hospital.
Fighting on Saturday had been reported in the town, a major military base outside the capital, in Gao and Kidal in the north, and the central cities of Sevare and Mopti.
Ulf Laessing, head of the Sahel programme at the Konrad Adenauer Foundation in Mali, told the BBC the incident appeared to be the "largest co-ordinated jihadist attack on Mali for years".
On Sunday, clashes between the FLA and the Malian government resumed in Kidal.
In later updates, he said they were "permanently withdrawing from Kidal" and "Kidal is now free".
There has been no confirmation of these claims from Mali's military.
In a statement on Sunday, it said the violence would "not go unanswered".
It added that a nationwide alert had been issued, with large-scale patrols stepped up and checkpoints reinforced to tighten security. Curfews have been imposed in some areas.
In Bamako, there is a curfew from 21:00 to 06:00 local time (GMT), expected to end on Monday.
Following Saturday's widespread orchestrated attacks, UN chief Antonio Guterres condemned the "acts of violence" as he expressed his "solidarity with the Malian people". West Africa's regional bloc, Ecowas, similarly condemned the attacks. Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso left Ecowas after military coups brought their armies to power.
Captain Ibrahim Traoré, Burkina Faso's military ruler who seized power in a coup three years ago, condemned the attacks in Mali.
The FLA has for years been fighting for the creation of its own Tuareg homeland in northern Mali, a large swathe of which it has effective control over. UN peacekeepers and French forces deployed to deal with the escalating insurgency left after the junta took over, and the military government hired Russian mercenaries to help tackle the insecurity.
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