Italia e Estero

Dagli Usa via libera al ritiro delle truppe dal Niger

epa03550339 A photograph made available by the French Army Communications Audiovisual office (ECPAD) on 22 January 2013 shows a French armored vehicle patrolling during operation Serval to push back the Islamist rebels, Diabali, Mali, 21 January 2013. Malian troops backed by the French military on 21 January 2013 moved into the central town of Diabily, which was pounded in airstrikes over the weekend, without resistance from Islamist fighters. A column of armored vehicles of the Chadian army was moving on 22 January from Niger to Mali border in order to participate to the recovery northern Mali in the hands of Islamists. EPA/ARNAUD ROIN/ECPAD/HANDOUT HANDOUT EDITORIAL USE ONLY
epa03550339 A photograph made available by the French Army Communications Audiovisual office (ECPAD) on 22 January 2013 shows a French armored vehicle patrolling during operation Serval to push back the Islamist rebels, Diabali, Mali, 21 January 2013. Malian troops backed by the French military on 21 January 2013 moved into the central town of Diabily, which was pounded in airstrikes over the weekend, without resistance from Islamist fighters. A column of armored vehicles of the Chadian army was moving on 22 January from Niger to Mali border in order to participate to the recovery northern Mali in the hands of Islamists. EPA/ARNAUD ROIN/ECPAD/HANDOUT HANDOUT EDITORIAL USE ONLY
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WASHINGTON, 19 APR - Gli Stati Uniti hanno dato il loro accordo per il ritiro dal Niger dei loro 1.000 militari che sono impegnati sul posto per la lotta contro la jihad islamica. Lo hanno annunciato alcune fonti statunitensi. Il numero due della diplomazia americana, Kurt Campbell, ha accolto la richiesta delle autorità di Niamey nel corso di un incontro a Washington con il primo ministro Ali Mahamane Lamine Zeine, al potere dopo il colpo di Stato dello scorso luglio.

Riproduzione riservata © Giornale di Brescia

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