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French forces in Mali capture three Al-Qaeda suspects

A French soldier of the Sangaris contingent mans a checkpoint in the formerly Muslim PK12 district of Bangui, Central African Republic, yesterday. France sent troops six months ago to its former colony to help an African force stem sectarian bloodletting in the impoverished, majority Christian country. CAR has been struggling to restore security in the face of relentless attacks between Christian vigilante groups and mostly Muslim ex-Seleka rebels who seized control in a coup last year but were forced from power in January PHOTO: MARCO LONGARI/AFP
A French soldier of the Sangaris contingent mans a checkpoint in the formerly Muslim PK12 district of Bangui, Central African Republic, yesterday. France sent troops six months ago to its former colony to help an African force stem sectarian bloodletting in the impoverished, majority Christian country. CAR has been struggling to restore security in the face of relentless attacks between Christian vigilante groups and mostly Muslim ex-Seleka rebels who seized control in a coup last year but were forced from power in January PHOTO: MARCO LONGARI/AFP

French forces in Mali captured three suspected members of terror group Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, an army spokesman said Wednesday.

"They are being questioned now. If our suspicions are confirmed, they will be transferred to the Malian authorities," French army spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Michel Sabatier told dpa.

The insurgents were captured during a special forces operation near the northern town of Timbuktu on Sunday, said Sabatier.

The United Nations mission in Mali, Minusma, confirmed that an AQIM cell was believed to be located west of Timbuktu. It was believed the group included non-Malian nationals, possibly insurgents from Somalia, Chad and Tunisia as well as a man with dual citizenship from Morocco and Spain.

The group is thought to be responsible for a rocket-propelled grenade attack on Timbuktu's airport on July 13 and for the killing of two staff members of non-profit organization Norwegian Refugee Council near Timbuktu on May 29.

French military forces have been searching for Islamist extremists in northern Mali since late last year.

France has 2,300 soldiers in the West African nation, which is recovering from a military coup and an Islamist insurgency.

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