Mali's Tuareg
MNLA group, holding the country's vast north with Al-Qaeda and
Islamists, will soon hold formal talks with the armed Islamist Ansar
Dine group, an MNLA official told AFP on Wednesday.
Reacting to
Ansar Dine's pledge to no longer seek to impose sharia across the
country, Mossa Ag Attaher hailed it as a "very encouraging step" and
added that "formal talks with the Ansar Dine will be held in coming
days."
He said this would help those fighting for an independent Tuareg homeland "to speak in one voice."
Ansar Dine, one
of the armed Islamist groups occupying northern Mali after a March coup
in Bamako, said Wednesday it does not want to impose Islamic law across
the entire country, but still wants to keep it in its stronghold of
Kidal. It also vowed to rid the area of "terrorism" and "foreign
groups."
Ag Attaher said
this was an "extra step which responds to what the MNLA, ECOWAS
(Economic Community of West African States regional bloc), and the
international community want."
The Ansar Dine,
the main Islamist group in Mali which has links to Al-Qaeda in the
Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), currently occupies the sparsely populated Kidal
region in the northeast.
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