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WAR REPORT
In Mali, abandoned weapons kill and maim children
by Staff Writers
Mopti, Mali (AFP) March 12, 2013


Mali accuses Tuareg rebels over civilian deaths
Bamako (AFP) March 12, 2013 - The Malian military accused Tuareg rebels on Tuesday over an armed attack previously blamed on Islamist fighters which left four civilians dead in the west African nation's war-torn north.

An army statement said a van carrying five people to the town of Tonka in the Timbuktu region on Thursday last week was attacked by gunmen who killed four of the passengers.

Several sources interviewed by AFP, including Tonka mayor Mamady Konipo, had blamed the deadly attack on suspected Islamists.

But a survivor had indicated the fighters were from the National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad (MNLA), a separatist group whose January 2012 offensive against the government touched off the cycle of unrest in Mali but now battles the Islamists alongside French troops.

Al-Qaeda-linked rebels ousted the MNLA and seized control of the fabled desert settlement of Timbuktu, along with the rest of northern Mali, in April last year before a French-led military campaign reclaimed the city in January.

Since then, the area has enjoyed relative calm while fierce fighting continues in the area around Gao, northern Mali's largest city, and the northeastern Ifoghas mountains, where armed Islamists are entrenched.

Intrigued, Amadou picked up a discarded grenade to play with outside an earth hut in central Mali. When he threw it, it exploded and he lost all the fingers on his left hand.

He is yet another victim of the explosive weapons left over from the months-long conflict between Islamist militants who occupied the country's north and the Malian authorities and their allies trying to push them back.

Since April last year 60 people have been killed or injured in this way. Children are often the first in line -- five dead and 38 hurt in the space of a few months, according to the UN children's fund UNICEF.

"The situation is extremely worrying," says UNICEF spokesman Laurent Duvilliers from the capital Bamako.

"200,000 children are at risk of injury or death in the north and centre of Mali because of these munitions that they want to play with."

Back in Mopti -- a city that lies on the edge of the country's north, where French-led troops have been battling jihadists since an offensive to reconquer the north began in January -- Amadou is being treated in hospital.

A white bandage covers the stump on his left arm. Dejected, the 19-year-old explains he took the grenade to have a look at what it was.

"I was curious, I unscrewed it to throw it and it exploded," he says softly under the white neon light of the hospital room.

"I'm angry at myself because I knew that it wasn't a good thing. But I'm also mad at those who brought this device into the city."

The explosion on February 28 etched a permanent mark on Amadou's family. His three-year-old brother has scars on his neck, chest and knee. The force of the blast also made a hole in a metal basin in front of their thatched-roof hut.

-- "An extremely worrying situation" --

Mopti itself was not the scene of fighting pitting jihadists against French-led troops.

But injured people still flocked to its hospital when clashes erupted in Konna, just 70 kilometres further north.

And according to Boubacar Diallo, director of the hospital, "jihadists have infiltrated the population."

"Over just a few days, we had two explosions. These are the collateral effects of war," he says, passing his hand over Amadou's head.

In Konna, Diallo adds, the situation is even worse. "There is ammunition scattered on the ground, grenades, and reports of shells that haven't exploded," he explains.

At the entrance of the city, "vehicles full of munitions that belonged to jihadists have exploded. But not everything has exploded so it creates a kind of dangerous field."

The two parts of the country most affected by abandoned weapons and ammunition are the north (Timbuktu, Kidal, Gao) and the centre (Konna, Diabali) where direct combat took place.

In a bid to limit this form of collateral damage, UNICEF and its partners have launched an awareness campaign.

People hand out comic strips in cities to try and make children more aware of the dangers and schools put informative pamphlets on display.

Already used in Afghanistan, the drawings have been adapted for Mali and have reached some 27,000 children so far.

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