Madagascar Coup Leader Michael Randrianirina Sworn In, Promises Transitional Government
Colonel Michael Randrianirina was officially sworn in as president of Madagascar on Friday, following a military coup that toppled the previous administration
The weapons were reportedly ordered by former Malian President Amadou Toumani Toure before he was ousted in a March 22 military coup. Photo by EPA/BGNES
A shipment of Bulgarian-made arms bound for Mali, which remained blocked in Guinea since end-July, has arrived in Bamako.
The weapons were reportedly ordered by former Malian President Amadou Toumani Toure before he was ousted in a March 22 military coup.
The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) intercepted the arms shipment to Mali at the port of Conakry amid concern that the weapons could wind up in the wrong hands.
An official of Mali's Ministry of Defense, as cited by foreign news agencies, informed that ECOWAS had informed Mali through an official letter that it would receive the impounded weapons and that the shipment had left Guinea on November 30.
Scores of trucks carrying armored equipment and containers under heavy guard arrived in Bamako Tuesday afternoon.
Guinea was ready to hand the weapons to Mali in mid-October but it had to wait for ECOWAS' permit.
In September, Guinea's Defense Minister Abdoul Kabele Camara, explained that the weapons bound for Mali had arrived at the port of Conakry on July 27 onboard a ship that had sailed from Bulgaria.
He said that the shipment included armoured personnel carrier and ammunition.
The Malian government reached an agreement with armed Islamist group Ansar al-Din and Touareg rebels occupying northern Mali to stop hostilities and hold talks to resolve the national crisis.
Dhibril Bassole, Foreign Minister of mediator Burkina Faso, announced Tuesday that the three parties had made a commitment to respect Mali's "national unity, territorial integrity, and a republican form of secularism as a prerequisite for the opening of the dialogue."
Delegations from the Malian government, Islamist group Ansar al-Din, and the Touareg Azawad National Liberation Movement also agreed on "the rejection of any form of extremism and terrorism."
US President Donald Trump has announced plans to impose tariffs on European countries that oppose Washington’s control of Greenland, escalating tensions over the Arctic territory
Iran is reportedly preparing to sever most of its connections to the global internet, allowing only regime-approved individuals to maintain access, according to Iranian digital rights groups.
China and Canada released a joint statement on Friday following high-level meetings held during Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney’s official visit to China from January 14 to 17, undertaken at the invitation of Chinese Premier Li Qiang.
Large-scale demonstrations took place on Saturday across Denmark and Greenland, organized by Greenlandic associations in response to repeated statements by US President Donald Trump about taking control of the Arctic island
Ukraine’s Defense Ministry has acknowledged a serious personnel crisis within its armed forces, with newly appointed minister Mykhailo Fedorov revealing that around two million Ukrainians have deserted military service, while nearly 200,000 soldiers are c
The European External Action Service (EEAS) has dismissed Russia’s recent accusations regarding the destruction of Soviet monuments in Bulgaria and other countries as unfounded
Bulgaria's Strategic Role in the EU's Drone Wall Defense Initiative
When Politics Means Violence