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Mali rebels declare independent state

Mali moved a step closer to being broken in two after al-Qaeda-linked Islamists and Tuareg rebels declared the nation's north an independent country to be ruled according to Sharia law.

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Mali moved a step closer to being broken in two after al-Qaeda-linked Islamists and Tuareg rebels declared the nation's north an independent country to be ruled according to Sharia law.

The announcement, from Ansar Dine and the Tuareg MNLA group, came as the country's interim president remained in a Paris hotel recovering from an assault in his private office last week.

Diplomats and Mali's neighbours fear that the country, once a beacon for democratic stability in West Africa, is poised to plunge further into crisis following a coup two months ago.

The "declaration of independence" for the northern half of Mali, Africa's sixth-largest country, came late on Saturday.

Timbuktu, the historic trading centre and seat of Tuareg learning, now lies in the disputed territory, to be known as Azawad, which is almost the size of France.

"The two movements have created the transitional council of the Islamic state of Azawad," the groups, which have been controlling the area for the past two months, said in their "protocol agreement".

"We are all in favour of the independence of Azawad... We all accept Islam as the religion," they said, adding that Islam would also be the main source of law.

In Gao, a major town in the north where leaders of the two movements have been holding talks, the sealing of the deal was greeted by the sound of guns being fired into the air.

The rebel army is made up largely of Tuaregs, Saharan tribespeople who have been battling for independence from southern Mali since the nation's independence from France in 1960.

Malian mercenaries returning from Libya after the death of Colonel Gaddafi strengthened the MNLA's leadership, swelled its infantry ranks and boosted its arsenal.

The rebels' lightning advance across Mali's north was launched as middle-ranking officers from the national army staged a coup in Bamako on March 22, creating chaos in the capital, far to the south.

Islamist fighters, grouped together as Ansar Dine, which has links to al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, then took the chance of the power vacuum also to seize territory.

The country's interim administration immediately rejected the independence declaration.

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