6/7/13, "Mali crisis: Human Rights Watch condemns ethnic abuses," BBC
"Both Tuareg rebels and
the army in Mali have committed abuses against civilians because of
their ethnic origins, a Human Rights Watch report says. The Malian army has been advancing towards the last Tuareg-held town.
Soldiers are accused of torturing Tuaregs, while the rebels are said to have rounded up and beating members of rival, darker-skinned groups.
French-led forces this year ousted Islamist militants, allied to the Tuaregs, from most of northern Mali. The Tuaregs of northern Mali, who are mostly light-skinned, have a long history of seeking autonomy from the rest of the country, saying they have been discriminated against by the government in Bamako.
'Unashamed racism'
BBC International Development Correspondent Mark Doyle says the struggle, by the mainly black-African army to re-take Kidal, held by the Tuaregs in the far north, has been key in reigniting racial tensions, along with plans to hold elections next month.
The Human Rights Watch report said the Malian army seriously abused a number of ethnic Tuareg villagers, threatening to kill them, beating them and using racial slurs. It also said about 100 black Africans were arrested in Kidal, with many being robbed, beaten or expelled towards the south.
Mali's Foreign Minister Tieman Coulibaly has condemned the Tuareg action. "In Kidal, black people are openly attacked," he told The Associated Press. "That is new. Before, racism was latent, a bit creeping, but now it is unashamed."
The MNLA rebels have denied the charges....The MNLA, which is fighting for autonomy for northern Mali, has refused to leave Kidal, while the army has been reluctant to attack the town in the Sahara desert.
The UN is due to deploy a 12,600-strong peacekeeping force before planned elections in July, which will incorporate thousands of West African troops already in the country in support of the French intervention."
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