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Malian troops targeted by suicide bomb attack

Bomber blew himself up at a checkpoint near the Malian city of Gao in the first such attack since France's military campaign began.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

A suicide bomber blew himself up at a checkpoint near the northern Malian city of Gao Friday in the first known suicide attack since a French-led military intervention liberated the major northern Malian cities, reports France 24.

Reporting from the central Malian town of Douentza, FRANCE 24’s Eve Irvine said a senior Malian military official confirmed that “a young man on a motorbike detonated an explosive as he approached a Malian army checkpoint just 15 kilometers outside Gao.”

While a Malian soldier was “lightly injured” in the attack, the suicide bomber was the only known casualty.

Hours after the attack, the al Qaeda-linked group, MUJAO (Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa) claimed the attack, according to AFP news agency, and has vowed further attacks against “the infidels and their accomplices”.

The suicide attack occurred as French forces further north took control of Tessalit, one of the last bastions of the Islamist rebels in the remote northeastern part of Mali near the Algerian border.

The overnight operation on Tessalit saw French special forces parachute into the local airport followed by other French and Chadian soldiers who arrived on a transport plane, according to French military spokesman Colonel Thierry Burkhard.

French and Chadian troops are pushing into the mountainous Ifoghas region in northeastern Mali, where Islamist rebels are believed to have fled the French-led military assault.

Almost a month after the January 11 launch of the French military offensive, the major northern Malian cities of Gao, Timbuktu and Kidal are under French and Malian control.

But Friday’s suicide bombing near Gao, which was recaptured on January 26, underscores the ongoing instability and the threat of terrorist attacks in the region.

Meanwhile in the capital of Bamako, located in the south, gunfire erupted between rival factions of the Malian army as soldiers attacked a camp of elite paratroopers loyal to ousted Malian president Amadou Toumani Touré.

At least one person was killed and many more were injured in the attack, according to FRANCE 24 correspondent Fabien Offner.

Read more of this report from France 24.