Anti- US, and imperialism, taking shape in Africa?
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                Rebels fire at US military plane in Mali            Bamako, 
Mali                  13 September 2007 01:37                    
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  Tuareg rebels fired at a United States military plane dropping provisions to 
Malian troops in the north of the African country, but did not hit it, a US 
diplomatic source said here on Thursday.

"Our plane was shot at ... but there was no damage," the source said, adding 
that the plane completed its mission and returned to the Malian capital, 
Bamako. "The [Tuareg] rebels did it," the source said.

The shooting occurred two days after Western ambassadors said that unrest in 
northern Mali was causing increasing concern internationally. Low-level 
violence has for weeks simmered in the region, where armed Tuaregs -- an 
indigenous, nomadic Berber people -- have been demanding resources for 
development.

The plane was shot at on Wednesday during the second of two flight missions to 
troops fighting Tuareg rebels near the country's border with Algeria.

"There were two series of shootings, but the plane flew higher after the first 
series," a local NGO official, declining to be named, said by telephone. It 
then dived towards the west of Tinzaouatene, in the north-eastern Kidal region, 
to deliver the remaining supplies, she said.

The plane had been in Mali for a military exercise called Flintlock 2007, which 
finished last week, but Mali afterwards requested help with the delivery of 
supplies to its troops, a US official said on Wednesday.

Western ambassadors in Bamako in a joint statement on Monday "resolutely 
condemned" hostage-taking and the use of landmines in northern Mali, noting 
that the civilian population there was increasingly being put at risk.

In some cases, the Malian rebels appear to be allied to Tuareg tribes in 
neighbouring Niger, where an insurgency erupted in February over demands for a 
share in revenue from the country's uranium mining.

Tuaregs in Algeria have also been active, and on August 30 and 31, 16 civilians 
died in the border area when their trucks drove over mines.

Just days earlier, Malian Tuaregs abducted about 50 people -- most of them 
soldiers -- in surprise raids. About 20 have been freed, some by force and some 
through negotiations, but the others remain hostages.

Both sides have appealed to Algeria to help with the situation. -- Sapa-AFP
    
       
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