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AFRICA NEWS
Sudan army denies Darfur report of attacks on women
by Staff Writers
Khartoum Nov 09, 2014


French forces say 24 extremists killed in Mali operation
Bamako (AFP) Nov 08, 2014 - French forces have killed 24 extremists and seized arms in a large-scale operation in northern Mali, where it intervened last year to put down an Islamist rebellion, the French army said Saturday.

The operation that began on October 28 and ended Friday led to the "neutralisation of 24 terrorists and the capture of two others," a statement said.

A number of vehicles were destroyed while arms and bomb making materials were also seized, the statement said.

The operation in the Kidal region resulted in "weakening the terrorist networks in northern Mali and loosening their grip on the population" in the area, it said.

A French special forces soldier was killed on October 29 as part of the operation aimed at stemming the return of jihadists in the north.

The operation occurred in the Amettetai valley and the Tigharghar mountain range in Kidal.

French troops intervened in Mali in January 2013 to chase out hardline Islamists, including Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, which had seized control of the country's northern desert cities.

This intervention was replaced several months ago by a wider counter-terrorism operation, codenamed Barkhane, in five countries along the southern rim of the Sahara including Mali. Barkhane includes 3,000 French soldiers.

The Sudanese army on Sunday said a media report that its troops had carried out a mass rape in the war-torn western region of Darfur was "unjustified and unreasonable". The denial came days after the military refused peacekeepers access to Tabit in North Darfur state, where they were travelling to investigate the alleged rape of 200 women and girls. Army spokesman Colonel Al-Sawarmy Khaled Saad told reporters mass rape "cannot be committed by any Sudanese institutions, military or otherwise". "Mass rape is something completely new to us as Sudanese," he told a news conference. A local news website had reported on November 2 that troops entered Tabit at the end of October after a soldier went missing and raped 200 women and young girls. "Tabit is a small village and our operation there is very small, and numbers around 100 soldiers," Saad said. He also said that the allegations concerned 600 women and girls, instead of the 200 reported. The UN-African Union Mission in Darfur (UNAMID) said it sent a patrol from state capital El Fasher to Tabit on Tuesday and Sudanese soldiers barred it entry. "We welcomed them, but we asked them about the official permissions which they have to have with them, and they returned to El Fasher," Saad said. He said a soldier was missing after visiting a family in Tabit, and that the army had ordered the family not to leave the village. The army is still searching for him, Saad said. Darfur erupted into conflict in 2003 when ethnic insurgents rebelled against the Arab-dominated Khartoum government, complaining of being marginalised. President Omar al-Bashir, 70, is wanted by the International Criminal Court for alleged war crimes committed in Darfur. Rising criminality and fighting among Arab tribes over resources and water have seen the security situation in the region deteriorate even further. The United Nations says 300,000 people have been killed in Darfur and more than two million displaced since 2003. Moroccan lawmaker killed in flash flood
Rabat (AFP) Nov 09, 2014 - Moroccan socialist lawmaker Ahmed Zaidi died on Sunday when the car he was driving was swept away in a flash flood, his Socialist Union of Popular Forces party announced.

Zaidi, 61, will be buried on Monday in his home town of Bouznika on the Atlantic coast, the party said in a statement carried by the national news agency MAP.

Heavy rain in the region caused the flash flooding, and his car was swept away by the rising waters of the Oued Cherrat river.

Zaidi, a lawyer and journalist by training, was the main rival of party chief Driss Lachgar.

Flash floods are frequent in Morocco, where four children drowned in the south of the country in September in another accident.


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