The
UN Security Council has approved a resolution that gives West African
nations 45 days to offer details of a plan for international military
intervention in Mali, now split in two. The text approved by the council
on Friday, October 12, 2012, also urges authorities in Bamako and representatives
of Tuareg rebels and Islamist fighters controlling the north to "engage,
as soon as possible, in a credible negotiation process".
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The
members warned that the process should be undertaken with a view towards
"a sustainable political solution, mindful of the sovereignty, unity
and territorial integrity of Mali".
Mali descended into chaos in March when soldiers toppled the president,
leaving a power vacuum that enabled Tuareg rebels to seize two-thirds
of the country.
But fighters, some allied with al-Qaeda, have hijacked the revolt in the
north.
The 15-nation council unanimously passed the French-drafted resolution
in a bid to revive stalled attempts to deal with the crisis.
In the resolution, the council expressed "grave concern about the
continuing deterioration of the security and humanitarian situation in
the north of Mali, the increasing entrenchment of terrorist elements including
al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, affiliated groups and other extremist
groups, and its consequences for the countries of the Sahel and beyond".
The council asked UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to work with the Economic
Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and the African Union in order
to submit to the council within 45 days "detailed and actionable
recommendations" in preparation for the deployment of an international
military force in Mali.
A first draft of the resolution called for a 30-day timetable, but 45
days was later deemed to be more realistic.
After details for military intervention are submitted, the council would
still have to pass a second resolution to give the green light to the
deployment. That is not expected to happen before the end of the year.
In the meantime, the council called on UN member states, regional and
international organisations to provide "coordinated assistance, expertise,
training and capacity-building support" to Mali's armed forces.
Bamako has formally requested a UN mandate for an international military
force with a deployment in Mali of West African troops that would help
reconquer the north.
For some six months now, the Security Council has called in vain for details
on the intervention, including its objectives and logistical needs.
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