French and Malian troops secured the
north Mali town of Bourem on Sunday, tightening their control over
areas where Islamist insurgents have been launching guerrilla attacks to
harass the French-led military operation."Bourem is a bastion of Islamists," said a military official from an African military contingent called AFISMA.
African troops in this contingent are being deployed
behind the French forward lines in the five-week-old intervention by
Paris in its former Sahel colony.
Located by the Niger River, Bourem is about 80 km (50
miles) north of Gao at a crossroads between Timbuktu to the west and
Kidal to the north, both of which are now under French and Malian
government control.
"All the current problems in Gao come from Bourem,"
said the official, who asked not to be named. He said there had been no
real fighting to take the town.
French leaders have said they intend to start pulling
out the 4,000 French troops in Mali in March to hand over security to
the Malian army and to the U.N.-backed AFISMA force, which is expected
to exceed 8,000 soldiers and is drawn mainly from Mali's West African
neighbors.
SUICIDE BOMBERS
Last week two suicide bombers struck at the same
checkpoint on the road coming into Gao from Bourem, while insurgents
also launched a surprise raid in Gao battling French and local troops.
The attacks, two weeks after Gao was liberated from al
Qaeda-allied rebels who had held it for 11 months, surprised the French
and the Malian soldiers there and raised the prospect of a laborious
counter-insurgency task for Paris' forces.
After driving the jihadist rebels from main northern
towns such as Gao and Timbuktu, French warplanes and special forces are
searching for rebel hideouts in the remote and mountainous northeast,
where Paris believes the insurgents may be holding French hostages sized
in the Sahel and Nigeria.
The United States and Europe back the French-led
operation against al Qaeda and its allies in Mali, hoping it will ward
off the threat of jihadist attacks in Africa and elsewhere.
But while providing logistical and intelligence support
in Mali, the American and European governments have ruled out sending
their own ground troops, and analysts say the French may be left with a
messy anti-guerrilla war on their hands.
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