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From:
Demba Baldeh <[log in to unmask]>
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Date:
Fri, 23 Mar 2012 20:28:50 +0000
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Laye, this is crazy... Am watching Malian TV ORTB right now and is music playing... I hope they counter that Clown and restore normalcy in Bamako country...



Regards 



Demba

Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile



-----Original Message-----

From:         Laye Jallow <[log in to unmask]>

Sender:       The Gambia and Related Issues Mailing List <[log in to unmask]>

Date:         Fri, 23 Mar 2012 15:17:32 

To: <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:     The Gambia and Related Issues Mailing List

              <[log in to unmask]>

Subject: [G_L] Mali Drama Continues - Mali state TV goes off air; fear of countercoup



 Mali state TV goes off air; fear of countercoup *Posted: Mar 23, 2012 5:09

AM CDT * *Updated: Mar 23, 2012 2:49 PM CDT *

 By BABA AHMED and MICHELLE FAUL

Associated Press



BAMAKO, Mali (AP) - Television screens throughout the landlocked country of

Mali went black Friday, as residents near the building housing the state

broadcaster saw troops erecting heavy barricades fearing a possible

countercoup a day after a military takeover.



On Thursday, mutinous troops seized control of the state television and

radio station, and announced a coup. The country's democratically elected

president has not been heard from since.



Shots were heard ringing out Friday from outside the broadcaster, and large

numbers of soldiers were seen amassing outside. The signal flickered back

on for some time, then off again. A message appeared calling for the

population to remain calm.



President Amadou Toumani Toure, who was overthrown in this week's military

takeover, is himself a seasoned soldier, who headed the country's parachute

commando unit. There has been speculation that loyalist troops, especially

those at the 33rd Parachute Infantry Regiment which Toure once belonged to

will attempt to take back power.



Contacted by telephone, resident Mohamed Traore said that after the signal

went dead, he went outside and saw the troops rushing to put up large

defenses. He lives 300 yards from the broadcaster and says that when he

went to speak to them, the soldiers told him that the red beret-wearing

loyalists were planning an attack. Freelance reporter Katarina Hoije, who

is staying in the Laico Hotel which faces the broadcaster, said that she

heard sporadic shots and saw troops arriving in large numbers outside the

station.



Mali is considered one of the only functioning democracies in the region.

This week's coup represents a major setback for the nation of 15.4 million

at the feet of the Sahara desert. Although Toure initially took power in a

1991 coup, he became known as the "Soldier of Democracy" because he handed

power to civilians, and retreated from public life. Years later he

re-emerged to win the 2002 election and was re-elected in 2007.



He was due to step down next month at the end of his term. A dozen

candidates were running in the April 29 vote, which is now in jeopardy.



The fears of a possible countercoup come as rebels from the Tuareg ethnic

group pushed toward three strategic northern Malian towns, including the

famed ancient city of Timbuktu, taking advantage of the power vacuum caused

by the coup



The second-in-command of the Tuareg rebels said his forces are advancing on

the city of Kidal as dozens of government soldiers desert and others

abandon their positions in the wake of the military takeover in the faraway

capital, located nearly 1,300 kilometers (some 800 miles) away.



Col. Dilal ag Alsherif told The Associated Press in an exclusive satellite

telephone interview that command of the West African nation's army is in

disarray and his movement is taking advantage to fight for an independent

nation for the lighter-skinned Tuaregs, who have long felt marginalized by

the capital.



Ag Alsherif said he was speaking Friday from "very near to Kidal, you could

say I am almost in Kidal," the northern government stronghold that is his

next target. He said his men took the garrison of Anefis, a town south of

Kidal, without a fight on Thursday. Meanwhile, in the equally important

northern town of Gao, the head of a resident's committee said that the

population had issued a "code red" because of rumors that the rebels were

about to attack. And in Timbuktu, once a tourist hotspot, a member of a

citizens' militia said the rebels had contacted them to say that they

wanted to take over the town.



Ironically the putschists said in their first public communique on Thursday

that they had seized power because of President Toure's incompetent

handling of the Tuareg insurgency. The rank-and-file soldiers are

overwhelmingly from the south, and from ethnic groups that do not share the

same culture as the Tuaregs. They have died in large numbers trying to keep

towns in the north out of the hands of the Tuareg rebels ever since the

rebellion started in January.



Instead of stopping the insurgency in the north, the coup is making it

easier for the rebels to gain ground.



On Thursday, the whereabouts of Mali's democratically elected leader was

unknown. African Union Chairman Jean Ping said he understood the president

is being protected by loyalist soldiers.



"The president is in Mali for sure - not so far from Bamako," Ping said.

"He is safe. We have been assured of that by those who protect him." He

added that the putschists were likely to face resistance because not all

units in the army had backed them.



"I think that the insurgents have not succeeded to have the officers with

them," he said. "All the officers have not joined them. So they still have

problems."



___



Michelle Faul contributed from Niamey, Niger. Associated Press writers

Rukmini Callimachi in Dakar, Senegal, Martin Vogl in Bamako, Mali, and Luc

van Kemenade in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia also contributed to this report.



Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may

not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.





--

-Laye

==============================

"With fair speech thou might have thy will,

With it thou might thy self spoil."

--The R.M



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