June 20, 2013

French, Malian troops encircle Islamist rebels in central Mali

b8a561830dd8bc52914d490b8c4e2978 French, Malian troops encircle Islamist rebels in central Mali

(Reuters) – French ground troops and Malian encircled Islamist fighters in the central Malian town of Diabaly on Wednesday, military sources said, as France prepared to launch its first ground assault on the rebels.

France, which has warned that Islamists’ seizure of Mali’s last year represented a threat to the security of the West, moved a column of on Tuesday into position at the nearby town of Niono, some 300 km (190 miles) from the dusty riverside capital Bamako.

“French forces have secured Niono to stop the Islamists advancing to Segou while the Malian army is securing the with Mauritania,” said one source. “They are now encircled and a final assault is only a matter of time.”

A Diabaly resident, who had fled to Niono to avoid the fighting, reported seeing French and Malian troops leaving in armored vehicles toward Islamist rebel lines.

In a sixth day of , French also struck the headquarters of the Islamic police in Niafunke, near the ancient caravan town of Timbuktu, local residents said.

French Edouard Guillaud said its forces were prepared to dislodge the Islamist fighters from the whole of Mali.

“In the coming hours — but I cannot tell you if it’s in one hour or 72 hours — yes, of course we will be fighting them directly,” he told radio.

Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said on Wednesday that the country’s campaign against al Qaeda-affiliated rebels in Mali would be long.

President said on Tuesday French forces would remain in Mali until stability returned to the West African nation. Hollande said France hoped, however, to hand over to African forces in its former colony, “in the coming days or weeks.”

Military chiefs from the West African ECOWAS met for a second day in Bamako on Wednesday in a bid to hammer out the details of their U.N.-mandated deployment.

(Additional reporting By Tiemoko Diallo; writing by Daniel Flynn; Editing by David Lewis)

Rugby World Cup: Wales, Ireland, England and Scotland learn fate

f0330e323c7cfb874b2964805ee249d7 Rugby World Cup: Wales, Ireland, England and Scotland learn fate

In Summary

2015 draw made
England, Wales & Australia in same group
Scotland in same group as South Africa
Ireland, France & Italy drawn together
Ponting makes eight in innings
fit for third India-England Test

Hosts England have been drawn with Wales and Australia in the pool stages of the 2015 .

Scotland are in Pool B, which includes South Africa and Samoa, while Ireland’s opponents in Pool D include France and Italy.

Holders New Zealand are in Group C, alongside the likes of Argentina and Tonga.

2015 World Cup pools

Pool A: Australia, England, Wales, Oceania 1, play-off winner
Pool B: South Africa, Samoa, Scotland, Asia 1, Americas 2
: New Zealand, Argentina, Tonga, ,
Pool D: France, Ireland, Italy, Americas 1, Europe 2

The tournament kicks off on 18 September 2015, with the final to be held at on 31 October.

England Stuart Lancaster said their draw was “definitely a pretty tough pool”.

He added: “To win the World Cup you have to win and I have got a huge amount of respect for what Wales have done recently.

“We know their squad pretty well, it is a young side and a lot of them will still be around in 2015.

“Australia have just beaten us and if you look at the age and profile of their squad, they have got some young lads as well. We will look forward to it.”

England have played Australia five times in the World Cup, famously beating them in the 2003 final in Sydney, although they lost to them in the 1991 final at .

England v Australia:

1987 England lost 19-6
1991 England lost 12-6 (final)
1995 England won 25-22 (QF)
2003 England won 20-17 (final)
2007 England won 12-10 (QF)

have met Wales twice in the competition, both times at the quarter-final stage. The Welsh won 16-3 in the first World Cup in 1987 with England winning 16-12 on their way to lifting the trophy for the only time nine years ago.

Wales have a poor record against Australia having won only one out of five of their World Cup encounters, beating the southern hemisphere side 22-21 in the third-fourth place play-off in the first World Cup back in 1987.

The biggest challenge facing Ireland is France, who they are yet to beat in the World Cup. The Irish went out to Les Blues at the quarter-final stage in 1995 and 2003, and also lost 25-3 in a group game between the two in 2007.

New Zealand hosted the last World Cup and beat France 8-7 in the final, with Tony Woodcock’s try proving decisive in 2011.

Rugby World Cup: Wales, Ireland, England and Scotland learn fate is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Rugby World Cup: Wales, Ireland, England and Scotland learn fate  Rugby World Cup: Wales, Ireland, England and Scotland learn fate  Rugby World Cup: Wales, Ireland, England and Scotland learn fate  Rugby World Cup: Wales, Ireland, England and Scotland learn fate  Rugby World Cup: Wales, Ireland, England and Scotland learn fate

 Rugby World Cup: Wales, Ireland, England and Scotland learn fate

U.N. head says Syria yet to send clear signal on peace

88a574a0815696a423ef2f699ac3f4e6 U.N. head says Syria yet to send clear signal on peace

(Reuters) – Syria has not fully withdrawn troops and heavy weapons from towns, failing to send a “” about its commitment to peace, U.N. chief Ban Ki-Moon said on Thursday, underlining Western fears for the week-old truce.

In the first progress report since the Security Council passed a resolution on Saturday authorizing the deployment of observers, Secretary-General Ban proposed an expanded mission of 300 personnel to monitor a shaky between forces loyal to al-Assad and opposition fighters.

After more than 10,000 people have been killed in 13 months of fighting, the report will be crucial in determining whether conditions are right for deploying the truce-monitoring mission at a Security Council meeting on Thursday, a day after an advance group of observers were surrounded by protesters against Assad’s 12-year rule.

Chinese Liu Weimin said Beijing – which with Moscow has shielded Assad by blocking calling on him to cede power – was “seriously studying” the idea of sending observers to monitor the truce.

said before a foreign minister’s meeting on Syria in Paris that the solution for the crisis in Syria was the establishment of a humanitarian corridor that would allow the opposition to Assad to survive.

“Bashar al-Assad is lying … He wants to wipe Homs off the map just like (former ) Gaddafi wanted to destroy Benghazi,” Sarkozy said ahead of the Friends of Syria meeting. “We called this meeting to gather all those who cannot stand that a dictator is killing his people.”

“The solution is the establishment of humanitarian corridors so that an opposition can exist in Syria,” Sarkozy told radio.

The scenes of U.N. vehicles being stuck in crowds and men running away to the in the outskirts of the capital Damascus on Wednesday were an echo of an earlier monitoring mission by the Arab League, which collapsed in January.

“The Syrian government has yet to fully implement its initial obligations regarding the actions and deployments of its troops, or to return them to barracks,” Ban told the Security Council in a letter obtained by Reuters on Wednesday.

“Violent incidents and reports of casualties have escalated again in recent days, with reports of shelling of civilian areas and abuses by government forces,” he said. “The government reports violent actions by armed groups.”

While the truce worked out with international envoy Kofi Annan has held in some parts of Syria, the army has kept up attacks on rebels in strong opposition areas such as Homs, Hama, Idlib and Deraa.

On Wednesday, 22 people were killed in Syria, including 13 civilians during shelling in Homs, said the British-based anti-Assad group Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. Syria’s state news agency said 13 people were killed by “armed groups”, including six law enforcement officials after a roadside bomb.

Syria pledged that it would cease using heavy weapons against what it calls foreign-backed terrorists, who have killed 2,600 soldiers and police. The ceasefire officially came into force last Thursday.

SCOPE OF THE MISSION

Damascus has challenged Ban over the size and scope of the monitoring mission, dismissing his efforts to increase the number of observers and secure European help in supplying planes and helicopters as unnecessary.

Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moualem said on Wednesday 250 people was a “reasonable number”, adding they should be from countries such as China, Russia, Brazil, India and South Africa – all more sympathetic to Damascus than the West or the Arab League. He also dismissed any need for U.N. aircraft.

In the report, Ban expressed some hope that there may be a chance for progress on ending the conflict.

He said the advance team had visited the town of Deraa and “enjoyed freedom of movement”, but its initial request to visit Homs, a centre of the uprising against Assad, had been refused.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who will attend the meeting in Paris, said on Wednesday that Syria was at a turning point.

“Either we succeed with … the Annan plan with the help of monitors … or Assad will squander his last chance before additional measures have to be considered,” she said.

Two previous Friends of Syria meetings, in Tunisia and Turkey, produced more rhetoric than results, and it was not clear what Thursday’s smaller gathering in France might deliver.

Clinton, as she has in the past, appeared to leave the door open to other nations arming Syrian rebels, something the United States has itself rejected, though it is giving the opposition communications and logistical assistance.

Washington and its Western allies have shown no desire to intervene militarily or push for the sort of robust peace keeping force in Syria that might require 50,000 troops or more.

The Syria mission was negotiated by Kofi Annan, a former U.N. secretary-general now acting as an envoy of the United Nations and Arab League. Diplomats say Annan’s main aim is to get a U.N. mission on the ground backed by Syria’s supporters Russia and China, even if it is not big enough at first to do the job.

(Additional reporting by Oliver Holmes in Beirut and Ben Blanchard in Beijing; Writing by Oliver Holmes; Editing by Will Waterman)

France arrests 19 suspected Islamist militants in raids

fbe9736b34824cfb496f68f8dd9926a4 France arrests 19 suspected Islamist militants in raids

(Phatforums News / BBC News) — Police in France have arrested 19 suspected Islamist militants and seized weapons in a series of dawn raids, says.

The raids were in Toulouse, the home of gunman Mohamed Merah, and other cities.

Merah, who killed seven people in three , was buried in Toulouse on Thursday after being killed in a shoot-out with police on 22 March.

Police have been hunting possible accomplices but sources said there was no direct link with the raids.

Mr Sarkozy told radio after Friday’s raids: “It’s our duty to guarantee the security of the French people. We have no choice. It’s absolutely indispensable.”

Forsane Alizza

The raids were carried out by the agency, the DCRI, with the help of the elite Raid police commando group, Agence France-Presse news agency reports.

Several of the raids were in Toulouse, particularly the Mirail quarter, sources told AFP.

But there were also raids in Nantes, which is believed to be a centre for the Forsane Alizza (Knights of Pride) group, to which Merah had been linked by some .

It is a Salafist group that was dissolved by the in an earlier investigation.
Merah is buried at the Cornebarrieu cemetery in Toulouse on 29 March Merah was buried at the Cornebarrieu cemetery in Toulouse on Thursday

One of those arrested was the group’s suspected leader, Mohammed Achamlane.

told AFP that three Kalashnikovs, a Glock pistol and a grenade were seized at his home.

Other raids took place in Lyon, Marseille, Paris, Nice, Rouen and Le Mans.

The BBC’s Christian Fraser in Paris says the DCRI had been criticised for allowing Merah to slip through the gaps, so the agency now appears to be concentrating on people that may have slipped from focus over the past few months.

Merah’s brother, Abdelkader, has already been charged with aiding him and police are hunting a said to be involved in the theft of a scooter that Merah used in all the killings.

Police also say a USB memory stick that was posted to the al-Jazeera TV channel containing the video he took of the killings must have been posted by someone other than Merah.

‘Profound trauma’

After Merah’s killings, President Sarkozy ordered police to evaluate the level of danger posed by those known to sympathise with radical Islamists.

Mr Sarkozy told Europe 1 on Friday that arrests of suspected radical Islamists “would continue and that will allow us to expel from our national territory a certain number of people who have no reason to be here”.

Mohamed Merah:
French citizen of Algerian extraction, aged 23
Had criminal record in France for non-terrorist crimes
Had described himself as an al-Qaeda member and has spent time in Afghanistan and Pakistan

Obituary: Mohamed Merah
Profile: Forsane Alizza

He added: “What must be understood is that the trauma of Montauban and Toulouse is profound for our country, a little – I don’t want to compare the horrors – a little like the trauma that followed in the United States and in New York after the September 11, 2001 attacks.”

Mr Sarkozy is in the midst of a presidential election campaign, seeking a second term in office in the polls on 22 April.

An opinion poll late on Wednesday suggested Mr Sarkozy was now ahead of main challenger in first-round voting intentions – by 30% to 26% – and had narrowed Mr Hollande’s lead in the largely expected run-off vote on 6 May.

Merah, 23, was buried at the Cornebarrieu cemetery in Toulouse on Thursday. His body was accompanied by around 15 men, although it was not clear who they were.

Toulouse’s mayor had said it was “inappropriate” for Merah to be buried there, but Algeria, where his family is originally from, had refused to accept his body.

Merah died in a police assault on his flat in Toulouse on 22 March after a 32-hour siege. He had killed three soldiers in two separate attacks before shooting dead three children and a teacher at a Jewish school.

Merah is said to have told police he wanted to avenge Palestinian children and to attack the because of its foreign interventions.