French soldiers kill Mali jihadist blamed for RFI journalists’ murder
French soldiers have killed a Malian jihadist suspected of being responsible for the kidnapping and death of two French journalists in 2013.
Florence Parly, the defence
minister in Paris, said French forces in the Sahel region killed “four
terrorists” during an operation in northern Mali on 5 June, including Bayes Ag
Bakabo, the prime suspect in the deaths of Radio France International (RFI)
reporters Ghislaine Dupont and Claude Verlon.
“His neutralisation means the end of a long
wait,” Parly said, adding that Bakabo had been in the village of Aguelhok
preparing an attack against UN peacekeeping forces when he was killed.
Dupont and Verlon, both in their
50s and veteran journalists, were seized in the flashpoint northern Malian town
of Kidal in November 2013 after interviewing a separatist Tuareg leader.
Their bullet-riddled bodies were
found a few hours later, with al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) claiming
the killings as revenge for France’s decision to intervene against jihadist
groups in the country earlier that year.
A French investigation concluded
that Bakabo, also a known drug trafficker, drove the pickup truck used to
kidnap the two journalists.
Parly expressed her “thoughts for
the family and loved ones of Ghislaine Dupont and Claude Verlon”.
The exact circumstances of their
deaths have never been revealed, and relatives charge that military secrecy has
hampered efforts towards that end.
In November, Agnes Callamard, the
UN special rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, noted
that “the alleged perpetrators have been named but are yet to be arrested and
prosecuted”. Callamard pressed the governments of France and Mali “to advance
the investigation without further delay so that justice may be served”.
RFI’s parent company, France
Medias Monde, said on Friday it was waiting for the investigation “to fully
clarify the circumstances of the tragedy and lead to the arrest of all the
remaining members of the hit squad and their possible accomplices so they can
be tried”.
The Friends of Ghislaine Dupont and Claude Verlon group also noted the death of Bakabo, but said in a press release they “regret that this jihadist leader responsible for the double murder of RFI journalists was not arrested to be questioned on the circumstances of this tragedy”.
Parly said the operation
“illustrates one of the main priorities of France in the Sahel region: taking
down the main heads of terrorist groups that are causing havoc in the region”.
The news of Bakabo’s death emerged
just a day after the French president, Emmanuel Macron, announced a drawdown of
French troops in the Sahel region, who number 5,100 in bases across the arid
and volatile region on the southern fringe of the Sahara.
Macron did not give figures for
the drawdown, but made clear he wanted future French involvement to be limited
to counter-terror operations as part of a multinational European force.
In Washington, a Pentagon
spokesman, John Kirby, said the United States would still support
counter-terror operations in the Sahel. “We’ll continue to provide a measure of
support – the kind of support that we’ve been providing to the French as they
needed in the region.”
The Sahel is seen by many western
politicians and experts as a major global security risk because of the growing
strength of jihadist groups there, as well as its role as a crossroads for arms
and people-smuggling.
Journalists covering the
insurgency in the Sahel often find themselves targeted by armed groups, either
because of their reporting or for their ransom value.
The French reporter Olivier
Dubois, 46, disappeared in April and is believed to be in the hands of the
Group to Support Islam and Muslims (GSIM), the biggest jihadist alliance in the
Sahel.
The 46-year-old freelancer was in
the northern Malian town of Gao, where he had travelled to interview an
al-Qaida-linked jihadist commander.
In 2020, French soldiers serving
in the Barkhane force killed the head of AQIM, Abdelmalek Droukdel, in a major
breakthrough, while regular airstrikes target other senior commanders. Another
senior AQIM figure linked to the murder of the RFI journalists, Amada Ag Hama,
was killed in a raid in northern Mali in May 2015.