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U.S. Wary Of Africa "Terrorist" Threat, Senegal Detains Suspects

French soldier(Reuters) – Senegal has detained a Mauritanian and a Malian for suspected terrorist links, its government said on Friday, and a top U.S. defence official called for international teamwork to counter a growing presence of al Qaeda and its allies in Africa.

The United States and African governments are backing a five-week-old French military campaign against Islamist rebels in Senegal's neighbour Mali, calling it a blow against jihadists who threaten attacks in Africa and elsewhere.

After driving the bulk of the rebels from north Mali towns such as Gao and Timbuktu, French, Malian and African troops are pursuing the insurgents in the remote mountainous northeast where they are thought to be holding French hostages.

But the French are struggling to secure the liberated areas from the threat of jihadist suicide bombers and guerrillas who have struck at Gao, raising fears al Qaeda and its allies could attempt reprisal attacks in the wider region.

A Senegalese justice ministry official said the Mauritanian and Malian suspects were arrested this week by local gendarmes at Velingara, more than 600 km (375 miles) southeast of the Senegalese capital Dakar.
French soldierFrench soldiers search people at a checkpoint on the outskirts of Gao, Mali, February 14, 2013.
"They are in custody for criminal conspiracy in collusion with terrorist organisations, aimed at undermining the country's military situation and its economic interests," Macoumba Mbodj, an adviser at the ministry, told Reuters.

Mbodj said an investigation was continuing and withheld further details. He would not comment on Senegalese media reports saying the detained Mauritanian was a member of al Qaeda who was trying to recruit young men to fight in Mali.

In testimony before the U.S. House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee in Washington on Thursday, senior U.S. officials said the threat posed by al Qaeda's North African wing AQIM and allied groups extended well beyond Mali and would require long-term international efforts to "neutralise".

"This is part of a growing terrorist presence in the region that threatens U.S. citizens, interests and partners," said Amanda Dory, U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defence for African Affairs.

Senegal, which has sent several hundred troops to join a U.N.-backed African military force for Mali that is still being deployed behind the French advance, has tightened security on its southeast border with its West African neighbour.

France has said it wants to begin withdrawing its 4,000 troops from Mali in March, but risks getting sucked into a tough counter-insurgency war in its ex-Sahel colony.

French warplanes this week hit Islamist rebel bases and supply lines in Mali's desert northeast, especially in the Aguelhok region, the French defence ministry in Paris said. It said six buildings and a storage zone, as well as a training camp of "terrorist groups", had been destroyed.

EXTREMIST "NETWORK" IN AFRICA
In her Washington testimony, Dory pointed to an attack last year in Benghazi, Libya that killed the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans, and to a deadly January raid by jihadists on the In Amenas natural gas plant in Algeria.

She said AQIM had the ability to attack western interests, and target or kidnap westerners for ransom.

Dory cited danger from what she called "a network of violent extremist organizations in Africa, from Egypt to Libya to Somalia to Nigeria", describing a risk of "cross-fertilization and cross-pollination between affiliated groups".

"The threat is dynamic and evolving and our efforts to counter it must be as well."

U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Johnnie Carson said the Mali intervention should be accompanied by reforms to foster good governance and economic development.

"Terrorists prey upon fragile states," Carson said, and the success of the French-led mission would be "fleeting without a democratic and credible government that is responsive to the needs of Malians".

Mali's interim government, formed after a March 22 coup that mired the nation in chaos and led to the north's occupation by rebels, said on Thursday it would hold a presidential election on July 7, and legislative elections two weeks later.

Coup leaders have continued to meddle in state affairs, increasing foreign calls for a legitimate civilian government.

In Mali's recaptured north, pro-autonomy Tuaregs - whose revolt last year was hijacked by the radical Islamists - are demanding direct talks with the central government in Bamako.

Carson said that while there could be no dialogue with groups supporting "terrorism", the legitimate political, social and economic grievances of indigenous communities in northern Mali should be addressed.
(Additional reporting by John Irish in Paris, and Pascal Fletcher in Dakar.; Writing by Pascal Fletcher; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

Comments  

 
0 #14 2013-02-22 14:55
Amen!

It turns out that banks actually open on friday;...

My transaction is done!
Temp. down!
Frustration level easing up!
The weekend is promising!
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0 #13 2013-02-20 16:39
Am hot n sweaty; my frustration level is at fever pitch..the evils of 4 day work wk are catching up with me too quickly..

Since last wk, i have been trying to get some business done at Trust Bk, but progress is at a standstill.

Had to stand down on monday, understandable so,..it is our independence..Tuesday, na na na..Jammeh says, stay at home, i got to run around the city today..

Wednesday comes..guess what..all Gambia is hungry to get to the Bank..n it was a near stampede situation..

It is close time..time to get out of the bank empty handed..We are hoping to get this business done tomorrow..If the crowd is massive tomorrow..some people may go home hungry until monday, curtesy of a 4-day work wk.

The new Gambia!!!
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-4 #12 2013-02-20 04:35
Quoting b4africa:
..Tell me your truth before you get headache or i will tell it for you.

..


Wow!! b4africa,..excuse me..talking about a headache..My God!! Those wise men in Europe..Papierre talking now!! Get over your headache..It is only horse meat after all..

They have dog meat buffet in Abuja, cat meat in chop sticks in Beijing n in my own community,..call it pig,..we call it fine boy..

So, to my gentle wise men from the brightest side of the planet, i say Get over it..we are hungry 4 your wise contributions!! !
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+3 #11 2013-02-19 17:20
Quoting papierre:
Truth be told, these conflicting views was generating a slow death in my body
Tell me your truth before you get headache or i will tell it for you.

Your position is that,killing is bad but Bush is a good killer because he kills killers.

My position is that killing is bad even if Bush is doing it.
"Right is right even nobody is doing it,wrong is wrong even everybody is doing it"
It is bad and moraless to kill and one cannot protect lifes by killing lifes but by providing justice to lifes.This is my position and how is that messing up your brain?
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-3 #10 2013-02-19 01:40
[quote name="b4africa..Hahaha Sir,am rolling on the floor,you sound like an examiner,my "bodies die"for your students..

Badara says that am in so many places that he hardly keeps track..but am saying..we are lost here cus we see u all over issues..

Am going to start to keep a red diary on all your positions to be able to build a case against your many positions..

Right now, i dont know who u support n who u oppose. I think u oppose Jammeh, it seems u are also opposed to Sall, Bush, Blair,...what?

Truth be told, these conflicting views was generating a slow death in my body 4 you..How about "my body die 4 u" lol
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0 #9 2013-02-19 01:22
[quote name="b4africa...Hahaha Sir,am rolling on the floor,you sound like an examiner,my "bodies die"for your students..

lol..u brought sweet memories back!!
I did a few things, but none was so intriging as teaching..Iloved every moment in the classroom..

U reminded me of my initial encounter with a few of my smartest students..they tried to pull my legs, intimidate me, n threaten me..

But on each occasion, i laught it off. The web sometimes makes me something else. But, i never express political opinion in or out of class.

But my biggest strength in school was the rigidity of my principles n impartiality of my actions..

Wow, how about my care free unconventional teaching method..engaging students mostly in jokes while juxtaposing those jokes into teaching concepts.. Was i surprised when all my students passed? No!!
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+1 #8 2013-02-18 23:02
Quoting papierre:
Sir,i want u to give me your own yardstick 4 what is good n what is bad. And under each category, list me 2 or more egs.
Hahaha Sir,am rolling on the floor,you sound like an examiner,my "bodies die"for your students.My simple answer i.e,"do on to others as you would like others to do on to you."
You are contradicting yourself with your stand point, "killing is bad" but "Bush is a good killer" because he kills somebody you both(U&Bush)believed he was a killer?Where is the moral of your killer(Bush) for killing a "killer"?You are brain-washed to think that your killer is killing others to buy you your security.They guide their missiles and misguide your likes with phrases;You are either with us or you are with the terrorist"or"To stop bad guy with a gun you need a good guy with a gun."Your bad guy is someone`s good guy"One man`s meat is another man`s poison."We cannot be good guys to protect lifes by killing lifes but by providing justice to lifes.
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0 #7 2013-02-18 20:50
Quoting b4africa:
Quoting papierre:
I scratch my head many times after reading your contributions.
WHY???


Sir, i want u to give me your own yardstick 4 what is good n what is bad. And under each category, list me 2 or more egs.

My standards are clear..Killers are bad people..those who try to stop killers are all good people..U get where am going..

Ousama is therefore bad..Bush is good..

On the other issue of Sall visiting Jammeh.. I hope Sall sends someone like justice minister..

Cus we need to make Jammeh understand that he does not belong to the same club as the civilised
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0 #6 2013-02-18 20:22
Quoting papierre:
I scratch my head many times after reading your contributions.
WHY???
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0 #5 2013-02-18 20:20
Quote:
"They are in custody for criminal conspiracy in collusion with terrorist organisations, aimed at undermining the country's military situation and its economic interests," Macoumba Mbodj, an adviser at the ministry, told Reuters.
Imported justice??
You are arresting your terrorist SUSPECTS whislt your president Macky Sall is dinning with a CONVICTED terrorist dictator jammeh who had illegally/unconstitutiona lly killed your people and his own people(Mile 2/9) and he is convicted by ECOWAS for kidnapping and torturing, where is the truth?

"Men who reject the responsibility of thought and reason can only exist as parasites on the thinking of others"
Most of our African leaders are mentally enslaved to become beggers and parasites who deny their own ideas/thoughts.
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