Reports Of Atrocities Emerge As France Escalates Mali War

By Ernst Wolff 
24 January, 2013 
WSWS.org

Only thirteen days after starting a war in Mali, France is massively escalating 
its troop 
presence there, even as reports emerge of escalating ethnic killings by 
French-backed Malian troops.
On Tuesday the Malian regime extended the state of 
emergency declared on January 11 for three months. At the same time, 
French and Malian troops set up positions in central Mali around the 
strategic airfield at Sévaré.
The airfield was reportedly the main initial target 
of the French intervention. Paris wanted to keep it from falling into 
the hands of the northern-based Malian opposition, so France could use 
the airfield to fly troops and equipment into the region.
French forces are also blocking journalists from 
reporting from the war zone, to slow the stream of reports of killings 
of and atrocities against civilians by French and French-backed Malian 
forces. In Sévaré, at least 11 people were killed at a military camp, 
near its bus station and its hospital. “Credible information” pointed to about 
20 other executions, with the bodies “buried hastily, notably in 
wells,” the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) reported.
A witness said the Malian army “gathered all the 
people who didn’t have national identity cards and the people they 
suspected of being close to the Islamists to execute them, and put them 
in two different wells near a bus station.” The soldiers allegedly 
poured gasoline into the wells and set them ablaze to hide the evidence.
Residents of Mopti in central Mali said that the 
Malian army had arrested, interrogated, and tortured innocent civilians, 
because the army thought that they were involved in the rebellion. Many Tuareg, 
who originally controlled the north, fled south when the 
Islamists took over and are being singled out for reprisals. Amnesty 
International claims to have evidence of extrajudicial killings of 
Tuareg civilians, the indiscriminate shelling of a Tuareg camp, and the 
killing of livestock.
A woman of the Fulani ethnic group described her 
situation: “The army suspects us—if we look like Fulani and don’t have 
an identity card, they kill us. But many people are born in small 
villages and it’s very difficult to have identification. We are all 
afraid. There are some households where Fulanis or others who are 
fair-skinned don’t go out any more. We have stopped wearing our 
traditional clothes—we are being forced to abandon our culture, and to 
stay indoors.”
The Malian army has a record of ethnic killings. 
Last September a truck with eighteen preachers from Mauritania crossed 
the border at Diabaly on their way to Bamako for a conference. Though 
none were armed and they had papers indicating their mission, all were 
massacred by the troops manning the border checkpoint.
Asked about abuses committed by Malian forces in an 
interview Wednesday on France 24 television, French Defense Minister 
Jean-Yves Le Drian cynically commented, “There’s a risk.”
Amateur cell phone videos on the internet show huge 
blasts and fireballs in living areas, and bloggers from Mali are 
reporting numerous casualties. The United Nations has reported that 
thousands of people have been forced from their homes over the past ten 
days. An estimated 230,000 people are now displaced across the country. 
According to Melissa Fleming, a spokeswoman for the United Nations’ 
refugee agency, the violence could soon displace up to 700,000 in Mali 
and around the region.
The Norwegian Internal Displacement Monitoring 
Center reported that people in the north were increasingly heading into 
the desert, as Algeria had closed its borders. Many are fleeing on foot 
because they cannot afford boats or buses.
Sory Diakite, the mayor of Konna, who fled to Bamako with his family after a 
French raid, described the bombing of his town. He said that during the assault 
in the first days of the war, people 
“were killed inside their courtyards, or outside their homes. People 
were trying to flee to find refuge. Some drowned in the river. At least 
three children threw themselves in the river in order to avoid the 
bombs. They were trying to swim to the other side.”
The constant increase in the number of soldiers, the massive build-up of 
ever-deadlier weapons and the increasing 
willingness of its allies to step up their support signify that such 
violence will only continue to escalate.
France is deploying more soldiers and more high-tech weaponry. Some 2,150 
French soldiers are in Mali, and their number will rise to 5,000 by the end of 
the month. 
The African-led International Support Mission to 
Mali (AFISMA) will comprise almost 6,000 soldiers, instead of the 
initially planned 3,300 soldiers, costing around $500 million. 
The Gazelle helicopters that participated in the 
first wave of French air attacks are being replaced by Tiger helicopter 
gunships, which have a longer range and greater firepower. “Cheetah” 
units based in France have been placed on alert, including a number of 
Leclerc heavy tanks and units armed with truck-mounted 155-millimeter 
artillery pieces.
So far nearly 1,000 African troops from Benin, 
Nigeria, Togo and Burkina Faso have arrived in Mali. Senegalese troops 
and up to 2,000 soldiers from Chad are on the way. Their transport is 
being provided by France’s allies: Denmark, Germany, Belgium, the 
Netherlands, Spain, the United Emirates, and Canada. Italy approved 
sending 15 to 24 military instructors to work alongside the European 
Union (EU) in training Malian forces and also agreed to provide 
logistical support with at least two cargo planes. 
US forces began their mission in support of the Mali war on Monday. Five 
four-engine C-17 planes took off from the 
Istres-LeTubé airbase in southern France, loaded with French cargo which they 
dropped off in the Malian capital, Bamako. 
According to German news magazine Der Spiegel, 
British forces were on “high alert” for possible deployment in Mali, in 
case France asks for help. The British foreign ministry denied the 
report, however.
Yesterday French Rafale and Mirage jets bombed 
targets near Gao, Timbuktu and Ansongo, a town near the border with 
Niger. Col. Oumar Kande, ECOWAS military and security adviser in Mali, 
said, “It is possible we will win back Timbuktu, Gao, and Kidal in a 
month, but it is impossible to say how long the overall war will last.” 
Kande’s words are in line with remarks by British 
Prime Minister David Cameron, who said that the Mali war might last 
years or decades.

http://www.countercurrents.org/wolff240113.htm


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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