Monday, February 28, 2011

Will A D And C Remove Fibroids

: Escape from Tunisian who had committed an anti-French attack in Bamako

BAMAKO (AFP)

AFP

The man suspected of committing an attack outside the embassy of France in Mali, January 5, 2010 in Bamako

A 24 year old Tunisian was launched on January 5 an explosive device against the Embassy of France in Bamako, leaving two slightly injured, escaped the prison Monday in Mali where he was since told AFP security sources in Mali.

The circumstances of the escape were not specified, "but more persons were arrested to keep him," said one of these sources to the Malian Ministry of Interior.

The Tunisian Simoun Bashir, who claimed a member of al-Qaeda in Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), was detained in an undisclosed location.

January 5 at night, equipped with an automatic pistol, a bomb and a grenade, he managed to detonate the device or the grenade, according to testimony diverging the time.

The attack outside the embassy of France located in the heart of Bamako, was unprepared, which seemed to indicate that the man was arrested shortly after, had acted alone, according to investigators. Nor has AQIM claimed responsibility.

One investigator had said that Bashir had Simoun, "in a personal capacity, hatred of France," adding that he was a member of a katiba (camp of Islamist fighters) in the Sahel AQIM where the organization operates that allegiance in 2006 at the head of al-Qaida, Osama bin Laden. The combination had

once done with the suicide bombing in August 2009, a young Mauritanian near the Embassy of France in Nouakchott, claimed by AQIM.

The bomber died in Mauritania was then detonated the explosive belt he was wearing. He was slightly wounded two French gendarmes who were doing their jogging and a bandwidth of Mauritania.

In July 2010, AQIM had designated France as a military target after Franco-Mauritanian waged against a base of the organization in Mali, whose goal was to free French hostage Michel Germaneau, 78 years.

September Islamist fighters had been killed, but the hostage was not released and AQIM had then announced they had killed him.

She still holds four French hostages, kidnapped on September 16, 2010 an extraction of uranium group Areva at Arlit in northern Niger. Three others, one French, a Malagasy and a Togolese, abductees were released Friday.

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