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French President Francois Hollande addresses the troops at the airport following his two-hour-long visit to Timbuktu, Mali. Jerome Delay/AP/Press Association Images

French president makes trip to Mali city of Timbuktu

Francois Hollande was greeted with chants of ‘Thank You, France.’

THE PRESIDENT OF France travelled to Timbuktu in Mali today to meet with local elders just days after the country’s forces liberated the Saharan town.

Francois Hollande was accompanied by Foreign Affairs Minister Laurent Fabius, Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian and Development Minister Pascal Canfin for the triumphant trip.

The President was greeted with chants of ‘Thank You, France’ as thousands of people gathered in the city’s main square. Well-wishers also danced to the beat of drums, an activity forbidden during the extremists’ 10-month occupation.

Elders gather with over two thousand well-wishers to greet French President Francois Hollande during his two-hour-long visit to Timbuktu, Mali.

Earlier in the week, Hollande had indicated that he would push for African troops to take over the French-led offensive that drove back Islamist rebels from the country’s desert north.

He told the crowds that although France’s mission was not finished, African countries would have to take over soon.

“We’ve already done a lot of work. It’s not over yet, it’s going to take several weeks, but our goal is to pass the baton. We have no intention to stay. Our African friends will be able to do the job we’ve been doing until now.”

Mali’s interim president Dioncounda Traore welcomed the President, taking his hand and raising their arms in a victory salute. He thanked his counterpart for the efficiency of his troops.

After Timbuktu, Hollande and Traore were due to fly to Bamako for a working lunch.

It is almost four weeks since France first intervened in the intense battle, trying to win back huge areas of the former colony held by the rebels since April 2012.

Although Mali gained its independent in 1960, it asked for France’s help on 10 January when Islamists captured a key town and warned of plans to push further south towards the capital.

However, there was also a sense today that the situation is not solved.

Fifty-three-year-old Fanta Diarra Toure told AFP, “The women of Timbuktu will thank Francois Hollande forever. We must tell him that he has cut down the tree but still has to tear up its roots.”

There have been signs that Islamists could wage a guerrilla campaign from the north.

(All images: AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

Human rights groups have now called for investigations to open into possible war crimes, allegedly carried out by both sides.

Human Rights Watch said Friday that Islamists had killed at least seven Malian soldiers by slitting their throats or shooting them in the mouth, and that Malian troops had shot at least 13 suspected Islamist supporters in Sevare and dumped them into wells.

The Malian army has denied any crimes by its forces.

Amnesty International also called on the French army to launch an investigation into the deaths of five civilians killed in a helicopter attack on the town of Konna at the start of the campaign.

France said it had no helicopters active in the town at the time.

A record number of refugees — some 1,300 a day — have been fleeing to neighbouring Mauritania, officials there said.

In all, the crisis has caused some 377,000 people to flee their homes, including 150,000 who have sought refuge across Mali’s borders, according to the UN.

-Additional reporting by AFP

Explainer: What is happening in Mali?

Read: Mali’s president rules out talks with Islamists

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6 Comments
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    Mute John003
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    Dec 23rd 2017, 10:52 AM

    Surprised China agreed to the sanctions in the U.N…..Good diplomacy on part of US…This may be final blow to North Korea might lead to slow end of the regime there…

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    Mute Martin Black
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    Dec 23rd 2017, 11:01 AM

    @John003: it’s not something President Trump’s predecessor could get the chinese to go along with.

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    Mute Mick Tobin
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    Dec 23rd 2017, 11:22 AM

    @Martin Black: That’d presumably be because the Chinese are feeling the pinch now like everybody else. They feel abstaining is no longer enough. The big problem for China is their worry about what comes next. North Korea has not just been a nuisance to them but also a convenient buffer. Without that ambiguous attitude all of this wouldn’t have been happening in the first place.

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    Mute Sean Conway
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    Dec 23rd 2017, 12:49 PM

    @John003: Every part of asia has US nuklear weapons pointing at them. would the trump like that on his doorstep?

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    Mute Michael Geraghty
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    Dec 23rd 2017, 7:34 PM

    @Sean Conway: what difference does ot make if you have one country with thousands of nuclear weapons or several country’s around you pointing the same countries weapons at them? USA has russia that points it’s arsenal at them. It’s mutually assured destruction and it’s surprisingly effective at keeping peace.

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    Mute Tommy Roche
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    Dec 23rd 2017, 11:13 AM

    Good job they decided to cap the importation of diesel and kerosene. That will put a stop to the 2ltr Diesel Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles and the shorter range home heating oil powered rockets.

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    Mute Martin Black
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    Dec 23rd 2017, 10:47 AM

    He’s a modern day John Lennon!!

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    Mute Paul Furey
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    Dec 23rd 2017, 2:41 PM

    @Martin Black: John Lennon wrote his own stuff.

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    Mute Fiona deFreyne
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    Dec 23rd 2017, 11:08 AM

    This is a more effective approach than Trump’s bellicose and empty rhetoric.

    Trump needlessly inflamed and provoked a rogue leader.

    Fortunately, the UN Security Council has take a more rational and proportionate approach.

    There is no need for kiling hundreds of thousands of people. All human beings are of value, regardless of nationality.

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    Mute John003
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    Dec 23rd 2017, 11:19 AM

    The UN security council is not independent of the countries in it…..China has changed its decades long stance on North Korea have to give Trump some credit for that. …However these UN sanctions may lead to famine in North Korea this winter with populal unrest against Kim….

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    Mute Padraic Reid
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    Dec 23rd 2017, 11:23 AM

    @Fiona deFreyne: The UN only agreed because of pressure exerted by Trump. The same can be said of the Chinese. Appeasing tyrants is a huge mistake.

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    Mute Fintan O'flaois
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    Dec 24th 2017, 5:40 PM

    @Fiona deFreyne: Please enlighten us, where has the “more effective” appeasement that has been the status quo for the past three decades got us? Maybe we should wait until DPRK has nuclear warhead ICBMs with global reach or maybe we should wait until they have submarine launch capability with capability of no warning global strike.
    No, appeasement has got us nowhere and it’s time for a new approach before the game is up.

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    Mute Dean Anderson
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    Dec 23rd 2017, 11:36 AM

    the sad part of all this is its the ordinary people of north Korea who’ll suffer most. Kim will make sure his big fat ar$€ is kept warm this winter &hes well fed &cosy..doesnt give a damn about his people

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    Mute Frankly Mydear
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    Dec 23rd 2017, 11:57 AM

    Kim the rocket man may go play with his Lego instead of rockets.

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