Tag: Mali

  • River Niger drying up, warns Federal Govt

    The Federal Government has raised the alarm that the River Niger is drying up.

     

    To save the river from the fate that befell Lake Chad, the Federal Government along with countries bordering the River Niger has approved the environmental audit of the river.

     

    Addressing journalists at the end of the 6th Annual Meeting of African Organization do Supreme Audit Institutions Working Group on Environmental Audit (AFROSAI WGEA) in Abuja on Tuesday on the development, the Acting Auditor of the Federation (AuGF) Mrs Florence Anyanwu confirmed that that River Niger was drying up.

     

    She noted that countries bordering the river have approved the environmental audit of the river and that commencement of the audit of one of the longest rivers in Africa will begin at the end of the meeting in Abuja.

     

    According to Anyanwu, “talks are ongoing on the cooperative environmental audit project on River Niger by Niger Basin Authority consisting of Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Chad, Côte d’ Ivoire, Guinea, Mali, Niger and Nigeria.”

     

    She lamented that the drying up of the River Niger posed social, environmental and economic treat to the communities bordering the river.

     

    When completed, the environmental audit of River Niger will afford the governments the information they need to save the river from further deterioration as well as ensure its continued benefit to bordering communities.

     

    With regards to Lake Chad that has significantly lost a large portion of it body of water, the chair of the AFROSAI WGEA, Mrs Mbah Acha Rose Fomundam said the environmental audit report of the Lake Chad has been sent to the governments of the four countries surrounding the lake to come up with laws to save the river from total evaporation.

     

    Lake Chad is a shallow lake that ordinarily should be fed with constant rain but environmental challenges have seen the lake suffer from sustained drop in the volume of rain fall feeding the lake and a growing population that depends on the lake for water, fishing and agriculture.

     

    Fomundam noted that “despite the signing of multilateral agreements on the environment and established institutions, current scientific studies reveal that many of the planet’s ecosystems have rapidly deteriorated over the last 20 years.”

     

    She added that “citizens have increasingly expected that organizations that hurt the environment be held accountable for their actions, with many citizens feeling that government declarations concerning the environment and sustainable development should be subject to independent audits to assess the extent to which they are implemented.”

     

    In her address the minister of environment Mrs Amina Mohammed said “environmental auditing is an essential component of sustainable environmental management as it provides the mechanism for allowing government to know what has gone wrong over time and highlights the need for urgent policy action.”

     

    She added that “our environment is our sustenance and unless we care for our environment, our lives will be at risk. Unless we have a clear knowledge of what is happening to our environment, we may not be able to make appropriate policies for sustainable environmental management

     

  • Mali arrests leader of Islamist deadly troops

    Mali arrests leader of Islamist deadly troops

    Malian forces have arrested a regional leader of Islamist group Ansar Dine in central Mali, after it claimed an attack in the region that killed 17 soldiers.

    Army spokesman, Modibo Traore, said in Bamako on Wednesday that Ansar Dine laid claim to the attack last week by gunmen who fired on troop positions, burned buildings and pillaged shops the attack killed 17 Malian soldiers and wounded 35 on an army base in the central town of Nampala last week.

    He said state security services arrested the commander, Mahmoud Barry, nicknamed “Abou Yehiya” as he was travelling on a road between Nampala and Dogofri.

    Traore said that Barry had also planned an attack on the town of Nara that killed 12 people.

    French forces intervened in 2013 to push back Islamist fighters who had hijacked a Tuareg uprising to take over northern Mali.

    In spite of the 11,000 United Nations peacekeepers deployed in the country since, insecurity has worsened and militants still launch frequent attacks across the vast desert country and its neighbours.

  • Landmine kills five UN peacekeepers in Mali

    Five United Nations peacekeepers were killed and three injured in northern Mali when their convoy hit a landmine and then came under fire from gunmen, a UN spokesman said on Thursday.

    The spokesman for UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said the attack on the peacekeepers, who were all from Chad, took place on Wednesday about 15 kilometres north of the town of Aguelhok, in the Kidal region.

    He said that over 70 UN soldiers had been killed in the conflict-ridden West African nation in the past three years.

    In 2012, northern Mali fell into the hands of Islamist insurgents who were pushed back after an intervention by the country’s former colonial power, France, in early 2013.

    Report says various Islamist groups still stage attacks in the area.

     

  • Three Red Cross officials missing in Mali

    International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) on Tuesday said three of its officials had been missing in northern Mali.

    Spokesman of the organisation, Valery Nana, said in Bamako that ICRC lost contact with one of its vehicles on Saturday.

    “The last contact we had, they told us that they were accosted by someone on a motorcycle,’’ Nana told newsmen.

    Report says the arid region is at the centre of a separatist movement and home to Islamist militants, some linked to al Qaeda who have staged a series of high profile attacks in Mali and beyond in the past year.

    The officials went missing near the village of Abeïbara as they returned to their base in Kidal.
    “Four were initially missing but one was released on Sunday,’’ he said.

    In 2015, one ICRC staff member was killed in an attack on an aid truck near Gao in northern Mali claimed by a jihadist group; in 2014, five members of the ICRC team were abducted in northern Mali.

    However, they were released two months later.

    In 2013, French-led forces drove Islamists out of Mali’s northern cities, including Kidal.
    The UN has peacekeepers in northern Mali, while France has a military mission in the region whose aim is to combat Islamists.

  • Chad, Niger, Mali, others to set up anti-Islamist units

    Defence ministers from West Africa’s arid Sahel region have agreed to work together to establish special rapid reaction forces to counter the growing threat from al Qaeda and Islamic State-linked militants.

    At a meeting in Chad’s capital N’Djamena, defence chiefs from Chad, Niger, Burkina Faso, Mali and Mauritania pledged to form special units to respond quickly to threats and attacks from Islamist militants.

    “These groups, each composed of around 100 well-trained and very mobile men, will deploy in zones where the terrorists operate,” the G5 Sahel’s permanent secretary Najim Elhadj Mohamed said following the meeting at the weekend.

    He said the units, tailored after Spanish forces used against the Basque separatist group ETA, would receive training and support from both Spain and France.

    French Prime Minister Manuel Valls, during a visit to the region last month, promised to boost assistance to the Sahel countries in the wake of dramatic attacks on hotels in Burkina Faso and Mali claimed by al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM).

    Intelligence will be compiled at a threat analysis and early warning centre to be established in Mauritania, where the Sahel group also plans to create a special war college.

    Financing was expected to come from European Union funding already pledged to the Sahel nations, the regional body said.

    The G5 Sahel heads of state already called for the creation of a multinational force last year.

    French forces intervened in 2013 to drive back Islamist fighters after they seized Mali’s desert north a year earlier, citing concern that the area could become a launching pad for attacks on targets in Europe.

    However, the militants have since reorganised and launched a wave of attacks against local security forces, U.N. peacekeepers and civilian targets that has extended well beyond northern Mali and into neighbouring countries.

  • Gunmen kill three Mali soldiers at checkpoint

    Gunmen attacked a checkpoint southwest of the Malian town of Timbuktu on Tuesday night killing three soldiers and wounded two others.

    A soldier in the town said on condition of anonymity on Wednesday that the attack took place at Lere, a town near the border with Mauritania.

    A Defence Ministry spokesman confirmed the toll but gave no further details about where or how the attack occurred.

    Mali is facing a growing threat from militant groups including al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb that have staged a series of high profile raids in recent months with numerous attacks on army and UN Nations personnel.

  • Mali coach names 30 players for CHAN 2016

    Mali coach names 30 players for CHAN 2016

    The new coach of the Malian local football team, Djibril Dramé, has released a list of 30 players called up ahead of the 4th edition of the African Nations Championship (CHAN).

    The event is to be hosted from Jan. 16 to February 7, 2016 in Rwanda.

    Sources close to the Malian football federation (FEMAFOOT) told PANA that among those selected are Samuel Diarra and Aly Mallé elected respectively as best goalkeepers and third top scorer in the world -17 championship in Chile.

    The list of the selected players includes the great majority players from Stade Malien (7), Onze Créateurs de Niaréla (6) and As Real (5).

    Following is the full list of players:

    Goalkeepers: Djigui Diarra (Stade Malien de Bamako), Alassane Diallo (centre Salif Keïta-CSK), Cheick Kadry Sy (Stade Malien de Bamako), Samuel Diarra (Association Sportive de Korofina-ASKO)

    Defenders: Issaka Samaké (Stade Malien de Bamako), Marius Hamed Assoko (Onze Créateurs de Niaréla), Sékou Diarfa (Onze Créateurs de Niaréla), Ousmane Diarra (Onze Créatuers de Niaréla), Hinako Jean Paul Oulaï (As Réal), Mamadou Doumbia (Stade Malien de Bamako), Lassana Samaké (Onze Créateurs de Niaréla), Moussa Ballo (As Réal).

    Midfielders: Moussa Ballo Sissoko (Onze Créateurs de Niaréla), Yves Bissouma (As Réal), Aliou Dieng (Djoliba), Yaya Samaké (As Nianan de Koulikoro), Makan Samabaly (As Réal), Moussa Coulibaly (Stade Malien de Bamako), Cheickna Diakité (Us FAS), Sidy Yaya Traoré (CS Duguwolofila), Fousseyni Coulibaly (As Bakaridjan), Abdoulaye Traoré (Djoliba), Aboubacar Doumbia (As Réal), Youssouf Traoré (As Nianan de Koulikoro).

    – Strikers: Souleymane Traoré (Stade Malien de Bamako), Abdoulaye Diarra (COB), Hamidou Sinayoko (Djoliba), Mamadou Coulibaly (Stade malien de Bamako), Lamine Traoré (Onze Créateurs de Niaréla), Aly Mallé (Black stars de Badalabougou).

    CHAN is reserved only for players in the African domestic championships.

     

  • Mali arrests two suspects linked to Bamako hotel attack

    Mali authorities have arrested two men suspected of links to last week’s  attack on a luxury hotel in the capital that killed 20 people, the security ministry said.

    “There are two suspects arrested,” Amadou Sangho, a spokesman for the ministry said without naming them.

    Another source close to the investigation said the suspects had been brought in for interrogation, based on information found in one of the attacker’s mobile phones.

    One of them had been regularly in touch with one of the gunmen since August, while another sent telephone credit to an attacker, he said.

    “It’s only after questioning that we will find out if the second suspect sells phone credit or is an accomplice,” said the source, requesting anonymity.

    Two armed men launched a dawn raid on the Radisson Blu Hotel in Bamako on November 20, killing six Russians, three Chinese and an American among others.

    The siege ended hours later when Malian commandos stormed the hotel and freed 170 hostages after killing two attackers.

    Three radical extremist groups – al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQMI), its splinter group al Mourabitoun and Massina Liberation Front (MLF) claimed responsibility.

    Security analysts say they could be collaborating.

  • U-23 AFCON: Nigeria slug it out with Mali

    U-23 AFCON: Nigeria slug it out with Mali

    The two top teams in the U-23 AFCON Group B, Nigeria and Mali, will slug it out on Sunday evening in the tourists’ resort of Mbour in Senegal in what many believe could determine the winners of this group.

    Nigeria U-23 team, Dream Team VI, will begin their campaign at the U-23 AFCON on the artificial pitch of Caroline Faye Stadium by 5pm after they rounded up their training camp in The Gambia with a big 5-0 win over Gambia U-20 team after both teams first drew 1-1 in another warm-up game.

    Samson Siasia’s team will hope for a winning start against Mali, whose country has been on a high internationally this year after they finished third at the FIFA U-20 World Cup and were beaten finalists in the FIFA U-17 World Cup.

    Historic Olympic gold medalist in 1996, Nigeria are featuring in the U-23 AFCON for the second time after they failed to make it to the London 2012 Olympics, while Mali will be appearing at the competition for the first time.

    The Malian Eagles are big and physical, meaning the Nigerian lads must use their athletic ability to come out victorious.

    They have picked several bronze medalists from the 2015 FIFA U-20 World Cup – including keeper Djigui Diarra, defenders Aboubacar Doumbia and Souleymane Coulibaly, midfielders Diadié Samassékou and Souleymane Diarra and striker Souleymane Sissoko.

    Their major absentee is COB winger Abdoulaye Diarra, who featured during the entire qualifying campaign before he was dropped by coach Cheick Oumar Kone.

    Mali prepared for the tournament with warm-up friendlies against Senegal (0-0 in Toubab Dialaw on Sunday and 2-2 in Dakar on Tuesday).

    The Eagles have failed to qualify for the Olympics since they debuted at the 2004 edition in Athens, where they fell to Italy in the quarter-finals.

    Dream Team have been boosted by overseas-based strikers Junior Ajayi (CS Sfaxien, Tunisia), Taiwo Awoniyi (FSV Frankfurt, Germany) and hopefully that should rid them of their shyness in front of goal, which robbed them of gold at the All Africa Games in Congo Brazzaville in September.

    Warri Wolves attacking midfielder Etebo Oghenekaro has been on great form leading up to this championship, scoring four goals including a hat-trick against Real Banjul.

  • Landmine kills UN peacekeeper in Mali

    A report from the UN said one of its peacekeeper was killed in Mali by a landmine on Tuesday.

    The peacekeeping mission (MINUSMA) said on Wednesday in Bamako that Malian capital that the mine detonated under a vehicle travelling in a convoy to Timbuktu and killed a civilian member of the mission.

    The mission said this underlined the persistent insecurity in the country four days after Islamist militants attacked a luxury hotel in the capital Bamako.

    A total of 22 people, including two gunmen died in Friday’s assault on the Radisson Blu hotel, popular with foreign visitors.

    Meanwhile, Wolfgang Neumann, Chief Executive of the Rezidor Hotel Group, which operates the Radisson Blu, said the attackers killed two Malian security guards, three staff members and another two employees were wounded.

    “The hotel will do everything to reopen as quickly as possible,” he told a news conference in Bamako.

    Jihadist group Al Mourabitoun and al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) said they carried out the attack in a joint operation. A third group has also claimed responsibility.

    The bloodshed underlined the difficulties a force of French troops and UN peacekeepers are having in stabilising the former French colony.