UN imposes sanctions on Mali groups

6th September 2017 By: African News Agency

UN imposes sanctions on Mali groups

Photo by: Reuters

Following a request from the Mali government, the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) has imposed sanctions, including a travel ban and assets freeze that will apply to individuals and entities engaged in actions or policies that threaten the peace, security, or stability of the conflict-torn African country.

On August 9, the government of Mali sent a letter to Egypt, Council President for that month, requesting the creation of a sanctions regime, citing repeated ceasefire violations by armed groups in northern Mali.

The imposition of sanctions on Tuesday follows UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres condemning an attack on a convoy of UN peacekeepers in Mali earlier in the day.

The attack in Kidal region on the UN Multidimensional Integrated Stabilisation Mission in Mali (MINUSMA) killed two peacekeepers and seriously injured two others.

The secretary-general warned that attacks against peacekeepers may constitute war crimes under international law.

In the sanctions resolution, adopted unanimously, the 15-member body decided to set up a Sanctions Committee, consisting of all the members of the council, and requested the Secretary-General to create, for an initial period of 13 months, a panel of up to five experts to support the committee’s work.

The 2015 Agreement for Peace and Reconciliation in Mali included inviting the Security Council to adopt measures against those undermining the implementation of the agreement and the pursuit of its objectives.

As the attacks, by suspected Islamists, continue unabated, MINUSMA recently ordered staff and contractors to avoid using rural roads.

Over the last two years northern Mali has faced numerous security challenges from the extremists as attacks with Al Qaeda affiliates also targeting Niger and the Ivory Coast.

Due to the growing security issues a regional anti-terror force, the G5 Sahel, was established and recently deployed, drawing recruits from the armies of Mauritania, Chad, Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger.

Prior to the force’s deployment the government of Mali had asked repeatedly for foreign military help to retake the restive north.

On January 11, 2013, the French military began operations against the Islamists while forces from other African Union states were deployed shortly after.

By February 8, the Islamist-held territory had been retaken by the Malian military, with help from the international coalition.

Tuareg separatists have also continued to fight the Islamists as well, although they have also been accused of carrying out attacks against the Malian military.