Heavy gunfire broke out yesterday as Tuareg rebels entered the main city of northeast Mali, in a relentless advance on an army struggling with the aftermath of a coup, a local official said.

We have 2,000 men in these forces. We have equipment. We have asked the international community to support us, to support Mali

“We can hear firing from heavy weapons. We also saw two army helicopters taking off” to combat the rebels, regional governor’s aide Mahamane Diakite told AFP by telephone from Gao.

A resident on the north side of Gao contacted from the capital Bamako, added, “Tuareg rebels are trying to capture the city and the army is defending its positions with helicopters.”

Ivory Coast President Alassane Ouattara, current chairman of the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas), said the regional bloc had put 2,000 troops on standby to intervene if necessary.

Tuareg separatists of the Azawad National Liberation Movement (MNLA), allied with an Islamist group, forced the army out of the strategic town of Kidal, north of Gao, on Friday.

Hours later the military said it had made a strategic withdrawal from two other towns, Ansogo and Bourem, “to reinforce our positions in Gao”.

Gao, the military headquarters of northern Mali some 1,000 kilometres northeast of Bamako, has a population of about 90,000, according to the government’s website.

The MNLA, boosted by weapons brought into Mali from neighbouring Libya following the fall of Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, relaunched a decades-old fight for the independence of what the Tuareg consider their homeland in the vast desert north in January.

It has been joined by the Islamist Ansar Dine (Defenders of Faith, in Arabic) which is headed by renowned Tuareg rebel Iyad Ag Ghaly and has ties to Al-Qaeda’s North African branch.

Mutinous soldiers saying they had been given no means to defeat the insurgency, overthrew President Amadou Toumani Toure on March 22, sparking a threat of sanctions from Ecowas.

Members of the junta arrived in Burkina Faso overnight for talks with President Blaise Compaore, appointed to mediate by Ecowas after the coup, his office said Saturday.

Compaore and Ouattara abandoned a trip on Thursday to mediate with the junta led by Captain Amadou Sanogo after a protest by coup supporters on the airport runway in Bamako.

But Sanogo called for outside help Friday after the rebels seized Kidal.

“The rebels continue to attack our country and terrorise our people,” he told journalists at the military barracks outside Bamako which have become the junta’s headquarters.

“The situation is now critical, our army needs support from Mali’s friends to save the civilian population and protect Mali’sterritorial integrity.”

“We have put on alert the standby forces of the Economic Community of West African States,” Ouattara said on television in Abidjan yesterday.

“We have 2,000 men in these forces. We have equipment. We have asked the international community to support us, to support Mali,” he said.

“We wish to avoid war,” Ouattara stressed. “If legitimacy is restored and these armed movements see that there is regional and international mobilisation they will leave Kidal immediately.”

On the MNLA’s website its spokesman Bakaye Ag Hamed Ahamed said the movement would “continue the offensive against two other regional capitals to dislodge the Malian regime and its army,” in a reference to Gao and Timbuktu in the north.

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