Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09BAMAKO58
2009-01-28 16:40:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Bamako
Cable title:  

BAHANGA RELEASES LAST THREE MALIAN SOLDIERS

Tags:  PGOV PINR PINS ASEC PREL ML 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXRO7235
RR RUEHPA
DE RUEHBP #0058/01 0281640
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
R 281640Z JAN 09
FM AMEMBASSY BAMAKO
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 9953
INFO RUEHZK/ECOWAS COLLECTIVE
RUEHAS/AMEMBASSY ALGIERS 0548
RHMFISS/HQ USAFRICOM STUTTGART GE
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 BAMAKO 000058 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 01/13/2019
TAGS: PGOV PINR PINS ASEC PREL ML
SUBJECT: BAHANGA RELEASES LAST THREE MALIAN SOLDIERS

REF: A. BAMAKO 00047

B. 08 BAMAKO 00482

C. BAMAKO 00037

Classified By: Political Officer Aaron Sampson, Embassy Bamako,
for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d).
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 BAMAKO 000058

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 01/13/2019
TAGS: PGOV PINR PINS ASEC PREL ML
SUBJECT: BAHANGA RELEASES LAST THREE MALIAN SOLDIERS

REF: A. BAMAKO 00047

B. 08 BAMAKO 00482

C. BAMAKO 00037

Classified By: Political Officer Aaron Sampson, Embassy Bamako,
for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d).

1.(C) Summary: On January 25 Tuareg rebel leader Ibrahim ag
Bahanga released the last three Malian military officers held
hostage by the Northern Mali Tuareg Alliance for Change
(ATNMC). Bahanga's decision followed the January 12 capture
of 8 Tuareg rebels by the Malian government and losses
incurred during a January 22 battle with the Malian army near
Bourghessa north of Kidal (Ref. A). Following the liberation
of the three officers, the ATNMC called for Mali to liberate
recently captured rebels and requested a brief cease-fire.
Previously Bahanga has liberated Malian soldiers following
protracted negotiations with government and local Tuareg
leaders, or the intervention - likely accompanied by monetary
settlements - of other actors like Libya. This time, it is
unclear whether Bahanga is hoping to swap the three Malian
officers for the rebels captured earlier this month, or is
trying to buy time for the ATNMC to lick its wounds following
the Battle of Bourghessa. End Summary.

--------------
Liberation Follows Battle in Bourghessa
--------------

2.(U) On the morning of January 25, three Malian soldiers
held hostage by Tuareg rebels under the command of Ibrahim ag
Bahanga were released and returned to Malian military units
based in Kidal. In a communique issued later the same day,
Malian President Amadou Toumani Toure noted that the three
soldiers were the last Malian military personnel held hostage
by Bahanga or any other group, and thanked leaders in the
region of Kidal who had been working with him to secure the
soldiers' release. President Toure attributed the release to
"a policy of firmness in the defense of the higher national
interest and a constant willingness to seek through dialogue
solutions to the problems of northern Mali." The President
also thanked certain unnamed "persons of note" who played an
influential role in securing the soldiers' release.

3.(C) Those working behind the scenes included the National

Assembly Deputy from Kidal, Alghabass ag Intallah, and Elladi
ag Alla who is credited with starting Mali's first Tuareg
rebellion in 1963 and is now based in Bourghessa. The
hostages were reportedly handed over to ag Alla. The
president of Kidal's Regional Assembly, Intahmadou ag
Albachir, may have also played a role in the negotiations.
ADC leader Iyad ag Ghali, who is still in Mali but keeping an
extremely low profile, was also likely involved.

4.(U) The liberation occurred days after the January 22
battle between Malian forces and Bahanga's ATNMC. An unnamed
ATNMC member told the media on January 23 that more than 40
Malian army vehicles and twenty more vehicles belonging to
the Imghad Tuareg militia had attacked an ATNMC patrol
composed of three 4x4s. Bahanga's Paris-based father in law
and ATNMC spokesman Hama ag Sid'Ahmed issued a statement,
also on January 23, declaring that the ATNMC had been
attacked by 420 Malian soldiers and 160 militia members led
by three Colonels. This was a reference to the Imghad Tuareg
militia led by Col. Elhedj Gamou. One of the other Colonels
was Col. Mohamed Abderahmane ould Meydou, an ethnic Arab. In
contrast to Malian claims to have killed 31 rebels, Sid'Ahmed
said six Tuaregs were captured at a check point but no ATNMC
members were killed. Sid'Ahmed claimed that 26 members of
the Malian armed forces were killed and another 32 wounded.

5.(C) According to the ATNMC, one of the wounded on the
Malian side is Ahmadou Badi, who was convicted for the 1999
carjacking and murder of a Danish citizen in Mali. Badi
"escaped" from prison in 2004 and disappeared until mid-2008
when he materialized as one of the leaders of the Imghad
Tuareg militia organized by Col. Gamou and the Malian
government to fight Tuareg rebels (Ref. B).

--------------
Generosity, Retreat, or Quid Pro Quo?
--------------

6.(C) Bahanga's decision could be interpreted as a
vindication for President Toure's new decision to meet force
with force and the Malian army's apparent victory in
Bourghessa. On January 26, two days after liberating the
three Malian officers, another spokesman for Bahanga and the
ATNMC told Agence France Presse: "Now that we have released
the last Malian soldiers, the government, on its side, must
release the Tuaregs it has arrested." Mali captured 8 Tuareg

BAMAKO 00000058 002 OF 002


rebels near the town of Tin-Essako in northern Mali on
January 12 (Ref. C). This group, which included a senior
rebel figure Ahmed Anakib, was transferred to Bamako on
January 14. One of the eight prisoners died in Malian custody
on January 15. Mali has repeatedly denied or delayed
requests by the International Committee for the Red Cross
(ICRC) to visit the remaining 7 prisoners. The body of the
deceased prisoner was given to the Algerians for an
independent autopsy.

--------------
Comment: Did Bahanga Blink?
--------------

7.(C) Bahanga's decision to release his remaining three
Malian hostages, the last of more than 60 hostages captured
in 2008, was likely the result of two factors: the January 12
capture of Anakib and seven others, and damage incurred
during the January 22 battle of Bourghessa. On January 28
National Assembly Deputy and influential Kidal Tuareg leader
Alghabass ag Intallah told the Embassy that, in his opinion,
Bahanga was hoping the Malian government would release the
rebels captured on January 12. Ag Intallah noted, however,
that he would have expected such a hand over to pass through
the Red Cross and expressed some bewilderment as to why the
liberation did not go through this channel. One explanation
could be Mali's refusal to give the ICRC access to the newly
captured rebels now in Bamako. On January 16 one Malian
official did tell the Embassy that he was encouraging
President Toure to barter the captured rebels for the three
Malian officers still held by Bahanga. ATNMC losses at
Bourghessa may have accelerated this process. To our
knowledge, the remaining 7 rebels captured on January 12,
including Ahmed Anakib, are still in Bamako.
MILOVANOVIC