The June 18 accord between Mali's government and the Tuareg rebels has raised hopes that the West African country is on track to regaining stability after losing half its territory last year to a rebel invasion.
The 15-country Security Council unanimously decided the conditions are in place to start deploying the peacekeeping mission on July 1 as scheduled, Britain's UN Ambassador Mark Lyall Grant told reporters after a council meeting. The 12,640-member UN force will replace a 6,000-member African-led mission now in Mali.
French Ambassador Gerard Araud said some of the 3,000 French troops now in the country will begin withdrawing at the end of the summer with the aim of reducing the force to 1,200 by the end of 2013.
The Tuareg rebel force seized the major northern cities of Timbuktu, Gao and Kidal last year. But on their coattails came a trio of al-Qaida-aligned armed groups that within weeks seized much of northern Mali. In January, France scrambled fighter jets over Mali to beat the Islamic radicals back.
The immediate challenge for the new UN force will be to help implement the agreement with the rebels in Kidal, including disarming the rebels and accompanying the return of the Malian army to the city.
That is crucial to the success of presidential elections scheduled for July 28, said Albert Gerard Koenders, special representative of the secretary-general for Mali. The UN mission will play a key support role in the election, including distributing of identification cards to voters in the north, many of them displaced by the fighting, Koenders told the council.
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