Ban Ki-moon concerned over attacks in Sahel

Ban Ki-moon concerned over attacks in Sahel
Updated 04 March 2016
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Ban Ki-moon concerned over attacks in Sahel

Ban Ki-moon concerned over attacks in Sahel

NOUAKCHOTT: UN chief Ban Ki-moon began an official visit to the Mauritanian capital Nouakchott late Thursday, as part of a tour of West and North African countries, Mauritania’s official AMI news agency said.
He plans to hold talks on Friday with President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz and Prime Minister Yahya Ould Hademine, his program showed.
Before flying to Mauritania from Burkina Faso, the first stop in his tour, Ban had expressed “concern” over a string of militant attacks in Africa’s Sahel region.
“I am deeply concerned by the terrorist attacks in the (Sahel) region,” he said in Ouagadougou.
“The response to terrorism must be global,” he said, urging “a strict adherence to human rights and international humanitarian law.”
Burkina Faso was struck on Jan. 15 by a string of coordinated attacks that left 31 dead, including 28 in Ouagadougou, where jihadists attacked a hotel and a nearby cafe popular with foreigners. “I returned to the region to ensure the international community continues to support the Sahel region. This evening I will go to Mauritania to continue my work of awareness-raising,” Ban said.
In Mauritania, Ban is due to hold talks “about the relationship of cooperation between Mauritania and the United Nations,” chiefly “the growing role and the support given” by the country to the UN’s peacekeeping missions, particularly in Africa.
Some 1,000 Mauritanian nationals are deployed as UN peacekeepers in missions across the world, including Ivory Coast, the Central African Republic and Darfur in Sudan.
After Burkina, Ban is due to visit Algeria.