• French soldiers of the Barkhane force carrying the coffin of a soldier who died when two French military helicopters collided in Mali. AFP
    French soldiers of the Barkhane force carrying the coffin of a soldier who died when two French military helicopters collided in Mali. AFP
  • Troops at the French Army base in Gao, Mali, remember the 13 killed in the collision. AFP
    Troops at the French Army base in Gao, Mali, remember the 13 killed in the collision. AFP
  • The crash occurred late on November 25, 2020, during an operation in the Liptako region, near the borders with Burkina Faso and Niger. AFP
    The crash occurred late on November 25, 2020, during an operation in the Liptako region, near the borders with Burkina Faso and Niger. AFP
  • It was the heaviest single loss for the French military in nearly four decades. AFP
    It was the heaviest single loss for the French military in nearly four decades. AFP
  • President Emmanuel Macron is considering reducing the number of French troops in the Sahel region. AFP
    President Emmanuel Macron is considering reducing the number of French troops in the Sahel region. AFP
  • President Macron is this week joining a Sahel G5 summit by video link. AFP
    President Macron is this week joining a Sahel G5 summit by video link. AFP

France kills extremist suspected in murder of two French journalists


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The French military has killed an extremist linked to Al Qaeda believed to have been behind the murder of two French journalists in Mali.

Three other extremists were also killed in a weekend antiterrorist operation around Aguelhok in northern Mali, said French Defence Minister Florence Parly.

The operation was carried out against a group suspected of plotting an attack on UN forces in the area.

French authorities identified one of the deceased as Baye ag Bakabo, who is suspected of masterminding the kidnapping and killing of Radio France Internationale's Ghislaine Dupont and Claude Verlon in November 2013.

The killings prompted new efforts to protect journalists in conflict zones.

Radio France Internationale reported Friday that Baye ag Bakabo had driven the beige pick-up truck used for the kidnapping, and that in recent months, he had headed an armed group that aimed to eliminate “all people suspected of collaborating” with French forces operating in the Sahel.

The broadcaster expressed its regret that he had been killed instead of captured, saying “his testimony could have removed zones of doubt that continue to cast a shadow on this case".

Only one member of the unit behind the kidnapping remains alive, the broadcaster said.

The announcement of the extremist's death came the day after French President Emmanuel Macron – currently in Cornwall for the G7 summit – announced a scaling back of French forces in the Sahel and a "profound transformation" of France's military operation in Mali and neighbouring countries so that it relies more on regional partners.