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Rebel Leader-Turned-Peacemaker Shot Dead in Mali

A rebel leader in northern Mali who was a signatory to a crucial 2015 peace accord was shot dead Tuesday in the capital Bamako, a killing quickly denounced by senior figures in the Sahel nation.

Sidi Brahim Ould Sidati, who was in his sixties, was gunned down by unknown assailants outside a mosque close to his home and died after being rushed to the Golden Life American Hospital, officials and family members said.

Mali’s interim prime minister Moctar Ouane said there were two assailants.

Ould Sidati was the rotating president of the Coordination of Azawad Movements (CMA), a mostly ethnic Tuareg alliance that rose up against the central government in 2012.

“We have just lost our president … who was assassinated this morning in Bamako,” CMA spokesman Almou Ag Mohamed said on social media.

Ouane and the UN’s envoy in Mali both expressed shock at the killing and paid tribute to Ould Sidati’s role in the peace process.

The CMA brought together Tuareg and nationalist Arab groups — including a faction led by Ould Sidati — fighting Mali’s government forces in the north until they signed the 2015 peace accord.

The deal, seen as crucial to ending Mali’s grinding conflict, has yet to be fully implemented in the former French colony.

The uprising began in the north when the jihadists allied with separatists.

The insurgency then spread to central Mali and to neighbouring Burkina Faso and Niger, claiming thousands of lives and displacing hundreds of thousands of people.

Several anti-jihadist military operations have been launched, including the French operation Barkhane and the G5 Sahel force, which includes units from the armies of five countries in the region.

‘Abominable act’

Ouane said he was “stunned” over what he called “an abominable act” on the same day he was to meet with Ould Sidati to discuss reforms.

Ould Sidati “was an important actor in the peace process”, Ouane said, vowing to launch an investigation into the killing.

The United Nations’ representative in Mali, Mahamat Saleh Annadif, expressed “outrage” over the killing.

Ould Sidati “was one of those Malians who believed and really worked for peace and unity in Mali,” he said on social media.

The late rebel leader was “constantly seeking consensus to make the Malian peace process irreversible,” he said.

The motive for his killing in the capital Bamako was not immediately clear.

But it comes as Mali remains in turmoil with transition authorities running the administration after a junta overthrew a civilian government last August.

Ould Sidati, former mayor of the town of Ber near the fabled city of Timbuktu, was one of the major figures of the Arab Movement of Azawad (MAA), part of the CMA that he helped to create.

In a statement, the CMA demanded authorities launch “an independent and transparent” probe into the killing and asked that the UN mission in Mali (Minusma) be involved.

It also demanded that added security for its leaders.

Bilal ag Asherif, secretary general of the National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad, another group that is part of the CMA, said the Malian government was responsible for Ould Sidati’s security.

The killing is sure to exacerbate the turmoil Mali has faced since a 2012 uprising that led mutinous soldiers to overthrow the president.

Since then, thousands of people, mainly civilians, have died at the hands of jihadists, militias and drug traffickers. The security situation has been made worse by a political and social crisis.

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