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Conflicts

Canada 'to send troops to Mali'

March 17, 2018

Canada will send troops and helicopters to Mali to join a UN peacekeeping mission there, Canadian media have reported. The helicopters are expected to replace a German contingent.

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Bangladeshi United Nations soldier walks by a car
Image: Getty Images/A. Kerner

Canada will soon take part in its first peacekeeping mission to Africa since Rwanda in 1994, sending peacekeepers, backed by helicopters, to join UN Blue Helmets in Mali before autumn, Canadian media reported late on Friday.

The commitment comes amid pressure on Canada from Germany and the Netherlands to send peacekeepers, with the Canadian helicopters expected to replace a German contingent, CBC News said, citing a senior government official.

The deployment would be for a planned 12 months, according to the report.

Read more: German defense minister: Development in Mali 'a question of political processes'

Dangerous mission

German Defense Minister Ursula von der Leyen said in November that German combat and rescue helicopters would end their deployment in Mali, adding that another partner was meant to take over "probably by summer next year."

She stressed that the Mali mission was "enormously dangerous." Two German soldiers died in Mali in July last year when their helicopter crashed.

Soldier walks to a helicopter
The Bundeswehr is planning to pull its helicopters out of MaliImage: picture-alliance/dpa/B. Pedersen

The German Bundeswehr is supporting both the EU and the UN peacekeeping missions in the troubled West African nation. The German Cabinet recently decided to send an extra 100 soldiers to join the UN mission there, increasing the German contribution to a maximum of 1,100 soldiers. 

Canadian Prime Minster Justin Trudeau promised in 2016 to send as many as 600 soldiers to join UN peacekeeping operations in Mali. However, in November last year, he said Canada would support UN missions by mobilizing a "quick reaction force" of 200 soldiers to any one spot.

Lawless regions

The UN mission in Mali, called MINUSMA, is one of its deadliest, with at least 155 peacekeepers killed since 2013.

The country has been unstable since separatist rebels, and then Qaida-linked militants, took control of the desert in the north in early 2012. Although they were largely driven out by a French-led military operation launched in January 2013, rebel activities continue in some areas despite the signing of several peace agreements.

The United Nations has some 15,000 peacekeepers in Mali.

tj/jlw Reuters, dpa, AFP)

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