Sierra Leone's President Ernest Bai Koroma (L), Togo's
President Faure Gnassingbe (C) and Burkina Faso's President Blaise
Compaore at ECOWAS summit
REUTERS
West African leaders on Thursday called for a regional military
operation against al Qaeda-linked rebels in north Mali to be transformed
into a U.N. peacekeeping mission as quickly as possible to secure
desperately needed funding.
France sent troops into its former colony last month to drive out Islamist fighters, claiming their seizure of Mali's north last year posed a threat to international security.
France sent troops into its former colony last month to drive out Islamist fighters, claiming their seizure of Mali's north last year posed a threat to international security.
Paris hopes that from March it can start withdrawing its 4,000 troops
but is awaiting the effective deployment of an African force (AFISMA),
plagued by logistical and financing setbacks, reports Reuters.
Meeting in Cote d’Ivoire's capital Yamoussoukro, presidents from West
Africa's regional bloc ECOWAS backed calls from France, the United
States and Mali itself for the mission to receive a U.N. peacekeeping
mandate.
"This shouldn't distract from ongoing operations on the ground," ECOWAS
commission president Kadre Desire Ouedraogo told Reuters.
"It's simply an indication that, once peace has returned, we need the
support of the United Nations system both for logistical and financial
support."
Some two thirds of the 8,000 troops of the African-led mission (AFISMA)
have deployed to Mali.
Many still lack the capacity to carry out combat operations and remain
in southern Mali, leaving French forces and around 2,000 troops from
Chad to secure northern towns and hunt down Islamist fighters hiding in
desert and mountain redoubts.
After struggling for months to secure funding for its deployment,
international donors pledged over $455 million for Mali at a meeting in
Addis Ababa last month.
With the number of troops more than doubling since deployment plans
were first hashed out last year, ECOWAS projects the cost of the mission
at nearly $1 billion this year.
Transformation to a peacekeeping mission would ensure funding from the
United Nations Department of Peacekeeping Operations and facilitate the
deployment of air assets essential for moving troops in Mali's vast
northern desert.
However, a decision by the U.N. Security Council remains weeks, if not
months, away. France's U.N. envoy said on Wednesday that the Security
Council would ask Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to report by end-March
on the possibility of creating a peacekeeping force.
Despite the rapid French advance which has seen the Islamists' former
urban strongholds rapidly retaken, security on the ground in Mali
remains tenuous, amid a mounting wave of guerrilla raids on towns and
suicide attacks.
French and Chadian forces are currently hunting die-hard Islamists
holed up in the Adrar des Ifoghas mountains. Algerian television
reported on Thursday that French troops there had killed Abdelhamid Abou
Zeid, a leading al Qaeda field commander.
No comments:
Post a Comment