GAO, MALI - Malian soldiers opened fire
Tuesday on anti-government demonstrators in Gao, killing three and
wounding at least 31, two doctors at a hospital that received the bodies
told Reuters.
The protesters were angry about the introduction of a new interim
authority set to take charge of the region Friday, which they said would
give power to armed groups and would not benefit local people.
The Malian government did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
A year ago, the government signed a peace deal with Tuareg-led rebels
aimed at ending a long conflict that has destabilized the desert
country and made it a base for violent jihad. There are signs the pact
is unraveling.
The government and the rebel alliance — the Coordination of Azawad
Movements — accuse each other of stalling on implementation, and the
rebels complain that the U.N.-backed deal falls short of their demands.
Thousands of protesters gathered in the streets of Gao, marching to
the central police station and surrounding it Tuesday. Many young people
had knives, a Reuters witness said.
Protesters set fire to tires, filling the air with acrid smoke, and
pelted the police with stones. Security forces attempted to disperse the
crowd with tear gas, and then the military opened fire.
"Look, I was shot in my arm and foot," said a man running away from the crowd, nursing bleeding wounds.
Shooting had stopped and much of the crowd had been dispersed by late
morning local time, but a heavy military presence continued to patrol
the streets.
The U.N. Security Council decided last week to add 2,500 peacekeepers
to the mission in Mali in order to "move to a more proactive and robust
posture" in the fight against militancy, the resolution said.
French forces intervened in 2013 to drive back Islamist fighters who
had hijacked the Tuareg uprising to seize Mali's desert north in 2012.
The militants have since reorganized and launched a wave of attacks.
Voice of America
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