Mali's government will probe Tuareg rebel leaders as crucial 2015 peace deal appears to crumble

FILE - Malian troops join with former members of the Tuareg rebellion for a joint patrol in Gao, Mali, Feb. 23, 2017. Mali's military government has announced Wednesday, Nov. 29, 2023 an investigation into ethnic rebel leaders who signed a peace agreement in 2015 to halt their quest for an independent state, a development experts say shows the crucial deal has collapsed.(AP Photo/Baba Ahmed, File)

BAMAKO, Mali (AP) 鈥 Mali's military government has announced an investigation into the Tuareg rebel leaders who signed a peace agreement in 2015 and now accuse the government of failing to comply with it, as experts worry that the deal crucial to establishing a measure of stability in the country's north is collapsing.

The public prosecutor at the Bamako Court of Appeal on Tuesday ordered the probe into the rebel leaders who at times have sought to create the independent state of Azawad and have in recent months.

The government of the West African nation has referred to the rebels as a 鈥渢errorist group.鈥

The developments could mean more violence in a region already under threat from fighters linked to al-Qaida and where both U.N. peacekeepers and French forces have withdrawn in recent months.

The Tuareg rebellion in Mali鈥檚 north has been a source of conflict for decades. More than a decade of instability has followed their rebellion in 2013, though i the Tuareg rebel groups signed the peace deal with the government that was welcomed by the United Nations.

In a televised statement, the public prosecutor announced that specialists in fighting terrorism and transnational organized crime would launch an investigation against "terrorist leaders and other signatories鈥 to that agreement.

Key leaders of the Tuareg rebellion were named in the statement as well as leaders of the al-Qaida-linked JNIM group.

In recent months, some rebels have abandoned the agreement, signaling a rise in tensions between them and Mali鈥檚 military junta.

Analysts have warned that the fragile peace agreement that had slowed violence over the years may crumble.

鈥淲e can effectively say that the 2015 peace agreement has collapsed,鈥 said Shaantanu Shankar, country analyst for Africa at the Economist Intelligence Unit.

鈥淭he Malian junta is facing serious problems with jihadi terrorism on one front and at the same time trying to fight an armed political movement and the rebels in the north, so the junta is overstretched," he said.

Mali鈥檚 military of the northern town of Kidal, dominated by the rebels for nearly a decade.

The military will focus on sustaining stability in the town as well as in central and southern Mali, which play a crucial role in the nation's economy, Shankar said.

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Associated Press writer Chinedu Asadu in Abuja, Nigeria contributed to this report.

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