At
least four suspected jihadists and a Malian soldier were killed on
Friday following an attack on a UN military camp in Timbuktu in Mali's
restive north, a Malian security source said.
The
assault came just a day after the fabled city celebrated the
restoration of its greatest treasures - earthen mausoleums dating to
mediaeval times that were destroyed during an Islamist takeover in 2012.
Hours
of fighting followed the early morning attack on the camp in the south
of Timbuktu, the source said, adding that the offensive against the
attackers ended in the afternoon.
"At
least four terrorists were killed, including those who blew themselves
up in their vehicle, [and] three Malian soldiers were wounded and one
killed," the source said.
"A
Malian officer who was taking part in the hunt for the terrorists was
unfortunately killed" when a wall collapsed on his armoured vehicle. "But
we are continuing search-and-sweep operations and we will also continue
patrolling to ensure the security of the local population."
The
raid was essentially a double attack with the assailants first blowing
up their vehicle at a military roadblock near the camp and a second
vehicle then coming in with others who started firing. It was a "carefully prepared" plan targeting the Nigerian contingent of Minusma, the UN's peacekeeping mission, the source said.
A Nigerian peacekeeper was slightly wounded along with a civilian. The
army had reports that a vehicle being used by the suspected Islamists
had "infiltrated the town of Timbuktu itself", another military source
added.
Another
Malian source said the camp had recently been evacuated by police
officers from Nigeria, but some soldiers had remained there.
Well prepared
A local resident said the assailants seemed to have "really prepared their plan". "I
believe that they first blew up their car so that Minusma forces would
come out to inspect the damage, in order to attack them again," he told
AFP, referring to the UN peacekeeping mission in Mali.
A
Malian soldier was killed last month in an ambush on the outskirts of
Timbuktu in continuing violence in the sprawling arid north of the
country. Northern Mali fell under the control of Tuareg-led rebels and jihadist groups linked to al-Qaeda in 2012.
The
Islamists sidelined the Tuareg to take sole control but were largely
ousted by a French-led military operation in January 2013. But
al-Qaeda-linked insurgents wrecked 14 of Timbuktu's earthen shrines
built during its 15th and 16th century golden age as an economic,
intellectual and spiritual centre.
They considered the shrines, as well as priceless ancient manuscripts, to be idolatrous. Friday's
attack followed a ceremony on Thursday to consecrate shrines that had
been restored with the help of the UN Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organisation (Unesco).
Large
swathes of Mali remain lawless, however, despite a June peace deal
between the former Tuareg rebels and rival pro-government armed groups.
No comments:
Post a Comment