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Germany Resumes UN-Led Reconnaissance Patrols in Mali

Soldiers from a German detachment of MINUSMA during a patrol on the road from Gao to Gossi in Mali on August 2, 2018. Photo: Sellou/AFP

Germany has resumed reconnaissance patrols in eastern Mali as part of a UN peacekeeping mission, the military said Wednesday, after suspending the operations last month when the Malian government denied flyover rights.

“Reconnaissance operations outside the city of Gao resumed yesterday, Tuesday,” a military spokeswoman said in a statement. Most German forces in Mali are based close to Gao.

On August 12, the defense ministry said it had suspended reconnaissance and related operations after Mali’s ruling junta denied permission for flights to support personnel rotation under the UN’s MINUSMA mission.

In Wednesday’s statement, the military said that a unit which recently arrived in Gao, “was now fully ready to work, and had taken over the task of securing the camp.”

The row erupted as Mali’s junta turns away from France and toward Russia in its fight against jihadism.

The long-running insurgency has claimed thousands of lives and forced hundreds of thousands from their homes.

The relationship between Bamako and Paris, its former colonial power and traditional ally, has deteriorated in recent months.

The arrival of Russian paramilitaries in the country on the invitation of the government was a key factor in France’s decision to pull its military forces out.

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