Home arrow Arab World arrow Tuareg rebels to 'lay down arms'
Aug 19 2008
Tuareg rebels to 'lay down arms' | Print |  E-mail
Arab World
By Agencies   
The Tuaregs want equal representation and equitable wealth distribution [Reuters]
The Tuaregs want equal representation and equitable wealth distribution [Reuters]
Tuareg insurgents in the Saharan region of Niger and neighbouring Mali have decided to give up arms this week in favour of mediation, one of the group leaders have said.

The move comes a day after Muammar Gaddafi, the Libyan leader, at a meeting in southern Libya urged rebel leaders to end the revolts in Niger and Mali.

On Monday Aghaly ag Alambo, who heads the Movement of Niger People for Justice (MNJ), said his fighters and those in Mali have agreed to submit to mediation by Gaddafi.

"We decide to lay down our weapons from Monday," Alambo said after a meeting with Gaddafi in southern Libya over the weekend.

The remarks by Alambo, who said he speaking on behalf of Ibrahim ag Bahanga, leader of the Tuareg rebellion Mali, were aired by Niger's state television, according to a Reuters report.

The minority rebel groups in Niger and Mali took up arms against their respective central governments last year complaining of unequal distribution of wealth in the oil-rich Saharan region and poor representation in government and the army.

Libya, the fourth largest African nation, wields considerable influence in parts of the Sahara and Sahel regions on its southern fringe through mining and tribal links.

On Sunday, Gaddafi warned insurgent leaders that they were "playing around with a dangerous and sensitive demographic area".

"They are playing around with, and harming, the Islamic area," he was quoted as saying by Libya's state television and Jana news agency.

"Do not waste time and cause hardships for children and women in the Sahara without need."

The Niger government made a peace pact with the Tuareg community to end a series of insurgencies in 1995, but another rebellion was sparked off in February 2007 when fighters from the MNJ attacked a number of military targets.

Last month the Mali government entered a ceasefire pact with the Tuareg rebellion in the country following talks in the Algerian capital, Algiers, to end clashes in the vast northern desert region.

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Tags:  Sahara Tuareg
 
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