Militants
killed two Chadian soldiers and a civilian in northern Mali on Wednesday,
military sources told AFP, with Islamist violence escalating in the troubled
west African nation.
The ambush follows an urgent request by the United
Nations for more troops as its peacekeeping force faces an upsurge in rocket
attacks and bombings by militants ahead of nationwide elections.
"Jihadists attacked the positions of the Chadian
army in Tessalit with heavy arms and car bombs. Two Chadian troops have been
killed. The four suicide bombers were also killed on the spot and a civilian
also died," a Malian army source told AFP.
He added that the militants retreated in an exchange of
gunfire with soldiers in the village, a remote but strategically important
outpost some 200 kilometres (125 miles) north of the rebel stronghold of Kidal.
An African source from the UN force confirmed the deaths
but in the confusion following the bombing it was not immediately clear whether
the soldiers and civilian were killed by the suicide bombers or heavy arms
fire.
The source said an undetermined number of civilians and
Chadian soldiers had been wounded and were being flown out for treatment by a
French military plane.
No group has claimed responsibility for the offensive,
the first against troops since Al-Qaeda splinter group the Movement for Oneness
and Jihad in West Africa (MUJAO) blew up a bridge in Gao, the largest city in
the north, on October 8.
A Malian soldier died after being wounded in an attack
by the group a day earlier during which rockets rained down on the city and
damaged buildings.
In late September, a suicide bombing in Timbuktu claimed
by the pan-regional Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) killed two civilians
and four bombers, as well as wounding seven Malian soldiers.
Islamist groups linked to Al-Qaeda were driven out of
Gao, along with Kidal and Timbuktu, after they occupied all three towns in the
wake of a coup in Bamako last year.
France keeps 3,000 troops in its former colony out of a
contingent it dispatched in January but Paris plans to draw down the force to
1,000 men by the end of January next year.
The 2,000 Chadian soldiers of the African-led
International Support Mission in Mali (AFISMA) were at the forefront of the
operation, losing at least 38 men in battle, with the heaviest fighting taking
place in the northeastern Ifoghas mountains.
The UN peacekeeping force, expected to reach a strength
of 12,600, replaced AFISMA in July and Malians will vote in the first
legislative elections since the occupation on November 24.
Just hours before the attack in Tessalit, the president
of west African bloc ECOWAS had urged member states and other countries to send
troops to bolster the peacekeeping mission in Mali.
Kadre Desire Ouedraogo, speaking two days ahead of a
summit in Dakar on the region's economy and recent political crises, called for
a positive response to a UN appeal in New York last week for troop
reinforcements and much-needed equipment.
"We know we have to get from 6,000 (peacekeepers)
currently to 12,600 by the end of the year," he told a news conference in
the Senegalese capital.
UN special representative to Mali Bert Koenders said
last week recent attacks in the north of the country had been "an
important wake-up call" over security.
Koenders told the UN Security Council that the
international force needed helicopters and troops as it builds up to replace
the French force.
"Troop generation will have to accelerate,"
Koenders said in a report on the work of the UN's Multidimensional Integrated
Stabilisation Mission in Mali (MINUSMA).
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