French army extends airstrike to Mali’s northern town

The French air force on Sunday extended strike further north to Gao, one of the three major towns controlled by rebels in northern Mali, according to reports from local residents and official sources in Paris.

Monday, January 14, 2013
A photo released on Jan. 12, 2013 by French Army Communications Audiovisual office (ECPAD) shows French soldiers boarding a fighter plane to Mali on Jan. 11, 2013 at Kossei camp at the French military base of N'Djamena in Chad. French President Francois Hollande announced that French forces had launched military intervention on Friday in support of Malian troops countering Islamist rebels' offensive. Net photo.

The French air force on Sunday extended strike further north to Gao, one of the three major towns controlled by rebels in northern Mali, according to reports from local residents and official sources in Paris.The French Defense Ministry confirmed the airstrike by four Rafale fighter jets, after witnesses reported bombardment of rebel positions around Gao, the hub of the rebel group MUJAO.The aircraft taking off from France targeted training camps, infrastructure and logistic depots of terrorist groups, according to the ministry.Military observers say Sunday’s airstrike marked a turning- point of the French operation in Mali, where French troops centered on actions in central Mali to "stop” rebel offensives in the previous days. In the region of Gao, which has the same name for its major town, residents remained indoors, terrified amid morning air raids.”Two planes have just begun to open fire. We are all in our houses,” one of the residents told Xinhua. "The raids targeted areas held by Jihadists. I saw smoke rising from the camps of Jihadists,”another witness said.Rebels including MUJAO, AQIM, Ansar Dine and the MNLA occupied Gao, Timbuktu and Kidal in the aftermath of a military coup on March 22, 2012.The MNLA seeking independence was soon maginalized, while the other groups vow to impose an extremist version of Muslim Sharia law throughout Mali.Fighting erupted in the past days after the Malian government and Ansar Dine failed to reach any deal in talks on a solution to the Mali crisis.On Friday, Paris confirmed its military operations in Mali to back the government forces in fighting the advancing rebels, who had seized the central town of Konna threatening the southern part of Mali, including the capital Bamako.

The Malian military said it regained control of Konna with the air support of the French army, vowing to uproot rebels in further actions in cooperation with former colonial power France and regional countries.