Ban for UN curbs on Mali rebels


UNITED NATIONS - UN leader Ban Ki-moon on Wednesday called on the Security Council to impose sanctions against Mali extremist groups accused of terrorism and desecrating Muslim religious shrines. He made the call at a Security Council meeting at which a West African envoy said militant groups who control the north of Mali want to set up a safe haven for “continental terrorist networks.” Ban said the 15-nation council should “give serious consideration to the imposition of targeted travel and financial sanctions against individuals or groups in Mali engaged in terrorist, religious extremist or criminal activities.” He called the destruction of nine of the 16 shrines in Timbuktu a “callous” act by the Ansar Dine group, which controls northern Mali with Qaeda linked fighters. A March 22 military coup in the West African country set off a chain of chaotic events which led to Tuareg rebels and Ansar Dine taking over the north of Mali. The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) has proposed sending an intervention force to Mali to help the transitional government. It has asked for UN backing.Burkina Faso Foreign Minister Djibril Bassole, acting as an ECOWAS mediator, met with leaders of Ansar Dine in Mali on Tuesday “and requested that they cut ties to terrorist movements before any peace talk could begin,” Ban told the meeting.

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