2015-01-07 14:19
New York - Mali's foreign minister told the UN Security Council
on Tuesday that an international force could help stabilise Libya and
the entire Sahel region and check the threat from Islamist groups.
Mali
is among five countries that launched an appeal to the United Nations
and the African Union for foreign intervention to fight Libyan armed
groups and to help build stable institutions.
"The heads of state
of Sahel countries have clearly called for the deployment of an
international force to contain the terrorist threat," Foreign Minister
Abdoulaye Diop told reporters after briefing the Security Council.
Northern
Mali was overrun by Islamist groups in April 2012, many of whom were
armed or trained in Libya, before France sent troops to drive them out.
Influential players
With
Libya engulfed in fighting between rival militias, there are fears that
Mali and other countries in the region will be dragged into more
violence.
"Anything that is happening in Libya has consequences
not only in Mali but on the entire Sahel and beyond. This is where we
see the connexion between Mali, ISIS, all the Shebabs and Boko Haram,
and I can go down the list," Diop said.
Islamist militias in Libya
are said to have developed ties with Islamic State fighters in Iraq and
Syria by offering training camps for their recruits.
The
foreign minister also asked the Security Council to use its influence
to bring key players to the table for upcoming talks hosted by Algeria
on a peace accord for northern Mali.
Diop said the absence of
influential players from the various armed groups, some of whom get
support from countries in the region, had prevented the peace talks from
making progress.
A recent surge in attacks is a bid by armed groups to derail the peace talks, scheduled to resume in February, said Diop.
On
Monday, at least eight people were killed in a raid on a Malian army
base close to the Mauritanian border, the deadliest since nine UN
peacekeepers were killed in October.
A string of brazen attacks
have left 33 peacekeepers dead in northern Mali since the UN force was
deployed there in July 2013, with Niger and Chad suffering heavy losses.
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