15 extremists killed in ‘underhanded’ attack on French and UN bases in Mali

15 extremists killed in ‘underhanded’ attack on French and UN bases in Mali
This file photo taken on March 08, 2016 shows French soldiers of the Barkhan operation, an anti-insurgent operation in Sahel standing guard at the Paskal camp at Timbuktu's airport. (AFP / PASCAL GUYOT)
Updated 15 April 2018
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15 extremists killed in ‘underhanded’ attack on French and UN bases in Mali

15 extremists killed in ‘underhanded’ attack on French and UN bases in Mali
  • The terrorists were disguised as UN troops aboard two cars laden with explosives
  • Mali’s unrest stems from a 2012 Tuareg separatist uprising that jihadists exploited

BAMAKO, Mali: Around 15 extremists were killed in an attack on French and UN bases in Mali that the French army described as “particularly sophisticated and underhanded.”
Militants disguised as UN peacekeepers exploded two suicide car bombs and fired dozens of rockets at the military camps in Mali’s northern city of Timbuktu on Saturday, killing one and wounding many, Malian authorities said.
“Terrorists wearing blue helmets aboard two cars laden with explosives, including one in the colors of the Malian army and another with a ‘UN’ written in it, attempted to infiltrate these camps,” the Malian government statement said. “The situation is now under control.”
UN peacekeeping and French military forces stationed in northern Mali have been under near-constant attack over the past year by determined and well-armed jihadist groups seen as the gravest threat to security across Africa’s Sahel region.
But even by the standards of Mali’s increasingly emboldened Islamist fighters, Saturday’s attempted breach of two foreign bases at once was ambitious.
“MINUSMA confirms a significant complex attack on its camp in Timbuktu mortars, exchange of fire, vehicle suicide bomb attack,” the mission tweeted. “One blue helmet was killed in the exchange of fire.”
The UN’s MINUSMA force confirmed that one of its peacekeepers had been killed in Saturday’s four-hour rocket, mortar and car bomb attack at international troops’ “Super Camp” neighboring Timbuktu’s airport, and around a dozen were wounded.
France said seven of its soldiers were hurt, lowering an initial toll from Malian authorities who had said a dozen French troops were wounded.

Some of the assailants, who have yet to be identified, came disguised as peacekeepers to sow confusion among troops trying to repel the attack.
UN peacekeeping chief Jean-Pierre Lacroix deplored the assault on Twitter, vowing: “Our determination to support peace in Mali remains unshakeable.”
French military spokesman Patrik Steiger said the attackers had “failed in their objective of causing the maximum damage possible.”
“Around 15 (attackers) were killed,” he added, some of them outside the military camp’s outer walls.
“Some attackers managed to enter, including some disguised as peacekeepers,” he said, adding the attack had not involved any friendly fire.
Mali’s security ministry said Saturday the assailants had tried to detonate two car bombs, one of them a vehicle in the colors of the Malian armed forces and the other carrying the UN logo.
The first exploded while troops managed to immobilize the second, the ministry said.
The French military said there had been three car bombs.
Steiger said allied troops managed to regain control with the help of fighter jets sent from a French base in neighboring Niger as well as helicopters carrying elite troops.
“By dawn the situation was stable,” he said.
Mali’s unrest stems from a 2012 Tuareg separatist uprising against the state which was exploited by jihadists in order to take over key cities in the north.
More than a dozen of Timbuktu’s holy shrines, built in the 15th and 16th centuries when the city was revered as a center of Islamic learning, were razed in a campaign against idolatry by Al-Qaeda-linked jihadists.
The extremists were largely driven out in a French-led military operation launched in January 2013.
But vast stretches of the country remain out of the control of Malian, French and UN forces, which are frequent targets of attacks.
The UN’s Timbuktu Super Camp, where Saturday’s attack took place, was already the scene of an attack last May which killed a Liberian peacekeeper and wounded nine.
In August 2017 armed men launched another assault on the camp, which hosts MINUSMA contingents from numerous countries. Seven security force members and six attackers were killed, according to the UN.