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WAR REPORT
French defence minister visits troops in Mali
by Staff Writers
Gao, Mali (AFP) March 08, 2013


France say killed more than 150 Mali rebels since mid-Feb
Paris (AFP) March 07, 2013 - French forces have killed more than 150 Islamist rebels since mid-February in fighting for Mali's northeastern Ametettai valley and around the city of Gao, the military said on Thursday.

French forces, who have taken control of the Ametettai valley in recent days, were on Thursday carrying out operations to sweep the valley and other areas of the Ifoghas mountains where Islamist militants fled after being driven out of Mali's northern cities.

French military spokesman Colonel Thierry Burkhard said militants with Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) had "set up in this area and wanted to stay in the long-term".

He said it was "likely that some terrorists managed to escape" during the operations.

Some 4,000 French troops are in Mali working with West African forces and Malian soldiers to hunt down the rebels after a French-led intervention launched in mid-January drove them from areas of northern Mali they seized last year.

French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian on Thursday visited French troops in northern Mali, where the military says they have killed 150 Islamist rebels over the past month.

"My first feeling is one of pride," Le Drian said in a speech to around 250 French soldiers on a stop in the city of Gao before heading to the capital Bamako.

He praised the troops' professionalism and courage to the point of "giving your life", after a French soldier died on Wednesday, the fourth French death since the launch of the operation on January 11.

The defence ministry said Le Drian started his visit in the Ametettai valley in the Ifoghas mountains, where French and Chadian troops were on Thursday carrying out operations to sweep the valley and other areas of the mountains near the border with Algeria.

The army said French forces had killed more than 150 Islamist rebels since mid-February in Gao and in fighting for the Ametettai valley, where the militants fled after being driven out of their strongholds in the north.

"By dislodging jihadists from their final bastions, you are the bridgeheads in this war... that France has decided to undertake against the terrorist groups still in Mali," Le Drian said in a ministry statement.

"On you, and with our brothers in the Chadian army... rests a large part of the success" of the military intervention, he said.

Le Drian also stressed that "the mission is not over... It is later that we will progressively withdraw to hand over to the African mission under the United Nations".

Mali's military chief General Ibrahim Dembele told journalists in Gao that "more than 70 percent of the work has been accomplished" against the Islamists extremists in the north.

But he added that "residual elements will continue to sow panic, nowhere is there total security".

With some 4,000 French soldiers deployed in Mali, France's President Francois Hollande on Thursday defended the operation in the face of criticism from his predecessor Nicolas Sarkozy.

"If some question why France is in Mali, it is because there were women who were victims of oppression and barbarism," declared Hollande, along with fighting for religious freedom and against terrorism.

His comments came after an article in the weekly Valeurs quoted Sarkozy on Mali saying: "What are we doing there? Except to support the putschists and to try to control a territory three times the size of France with 4,000 men".

France also said Thursday it was carrying out DNA tests to confirm reports from Chad of the killings in Mali of two top Islamist rebels, Mokhtar Belmokhtar and Abdelhamid Abou Zeid.

"We know that there were a fair number of leaders among the several hundred terrorists killed" in recent days, French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said on RTL radio.

"Very precise DNA tests must be carried out to determine their identities, which military services are currently doing," he said.

A source in Al-Qaeda in the Islamist Maghreb (AQIM) on Monday confirmed the death of its leader in Mali, Abou Zeid, but insisted that Belmokhtar was still alive and fighting.

Hollande said Wednesday that "terrorist kingpins have been destroyed" in Mali but did not make it clear if Belmokhtar, the mastermind of the January assault on an Algerian gas plant that left 37 foreign hostages dead, was among them.

Meanwhile a French-Malian citizen arrested in November for allegedly seeking to join Islamist militants in Mali has been expelled to France where he will be held for questioning, a French judicial official said Thursday.

Ibrahim Aziz Ouattara, 25, faces potential terrorism charges in France.

And a source familiar with the case confirmed to AFP late Thursday that a French national was among the half a dozen jihadists recently detained after heavy fighting between Franco-Chadian forces and Islamists in the Adrar des Ifoghas mountains in northern Mali.

burs-boc/mfp/gk

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