By Bate Felix and Adama
Diarra
BAMAKO (Reuters) – Malians queued to stock up on petrol at garages around the capital Bamako on Tuesday
after neighbours launched trade and diplomatic sanctions aimed at forcing the military junta to hand over
power.
For long one of the most stable democracies in West
Africa, Mali has plunged into turmoil since a widely condemned March 22 coup that emboldened Tuareg rebels to seize half the
country in their quest for a northern homeland.
They have been joined by Islamists bent on imposing sharia, Islamic
law, across the whole of the moderate Muslim state, now the latest security headache for a region battling al Qaeda agents
and home-grown militant groups like Nigeria’s Boko Haram.
Worried neighbours, including Ivory Coast and Niger, have
told coup leaders to step down immediately. On Monday they launched sanctions, including the closure of borders to the
land-locked country and a freezing of its funds at the central bank of the West African franc currency zone.
“I’m
just filling up now in case we get shortages,” said one resident at a garage in central Bamako before he rushed off with four
jerry-cans of petrol. Around 50 others queued for petrol in cars, motorbikes and on foot.
Much of Mali’s fuel is
imported from Ivory Coast and if the trade embargo takes full effect it could start to strangle the economy of Africa’s
third largest gold-miner in days.
The junta, led by the hitherto obscure U.S.-trained Captain Amadou Sanogo, issued a
statement late on Monday acknowledging the sanctions and repeating its promise to hand over power to civilians at an
unspecified date.
“We ask the population to remain calm,” the statement on state television said, adding that the
priority at the moment remained fighting the rebellion in the north.
ROLE OF ISLAMISTS
While the stated aim of
the coup leaders was to give the army more clout to tackle the two-month-old revolt, their power grab triggered a rebel sweep
through a northern zone the size of France – in many cases hard on the heels of fleeing army forces.
The Tuareg-led
rebel group MNLA says it controls the three main towns in the desert zone – Kidal, Gao and the ancient trading post of
Timbuktu – and has stressed it has no intention of pushing further north.
But there is growing disquiet about the role
of the local Ansar Dine Islamist group, which, rather seeking to carve out a northern homeland, wants to impose Islamic law
across all of Mali. In Gao its members ransacked hotels serving alcohol and told locals that Western-style clothing was
banned.
Residents in Timbuktu said on Monday that better-armed Ansar Dine fighters had dislodged MNLA rebels who
initially seized the town on Sunday.
Mali’s neighbours see the exit of the coup leaders as a prerequisite to any
regional attempt to halt the rebellion.
Ousted President Amadou Toumani Toure, who had been due to step down in
scheduled elections later this month, is still in hiding. Neighbours are proposing that a neutral figure be named as interim
president before a new attempt to stage polls.
It is unclear what appetite there is in the region for military
intervention to secure the south from any further advances and, ultimately, to win back ground from the
rebels.
Military chiefs of the 15-nation ECOWAS regional bloc are due to meet on Thursday to agree on paper a force of
up to 3,000 troops, but the arduous process of extracting troop contingents from individual countries has yet to begin in
earnest.
Over 200,000 Malians have fled their homes because of the fighting, and the pillaging of food, fuel and
medical supplies in Gao and other northern towns has worsened their plight.
In Paris, world culture agency UNESCO
appealed to warring factions to spare local heritage sites such as Timbuktu’s earthen mosques, cemeteries and other legacies
of its “golden era” in the 16th century.