Top news: French President Francois Hollande was hailed as a liberator Saturday during a visit  to Timbuktu, Mali, where he praised the military campaign to oust Islamist rebels while vowing that France would soon transfer responsibility for the mission to African forces.

Hollande has repeatedly stressed that the French military intervention in Mali would be short lived, but that commitment has in recent days run up against the reality on the ground, where Islamist rebels have ceded control of most of Mali's major cities but have likely taken refuge in the country's rugged mountains and caves. As a result, French airstrikes continued over the weekend as fighter jets bombed rebel training camps and arms and fuel depots. According to French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, the rebels "cannot stay there a long time unless they have ways to get new supplies."

Despite the continuing instability in the country, French forces said they would withdraw from Timbuktu on Thursday. That move would appear to signal a shift in the French strategy as it pivots from seeking control of Mali's major cities and tries to strike rebels who have taken refuge in remote parts of the country. Still, French forces do not control all of Mali's major cities. Though French forces control the airport at Kidal, but Tuareg rebels remain in control of the town. 

In a press conference at the French ambassador's residence, Hollande acknowledged the difficulties still facing the mission. "There is still a whole part of the north that remains unconquered ... There are terrorist elements concentrated in some areas of the country, others who are dispersed. There are risks of terrorism. So, we have not yet finished our mission," he said.

Iran: Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said that Iran is open to direct talks with the United States and that his country welcomed the resumption of multilateral negotiations scheduled for Feb. 25. Western diplomats, however, downplayed the significance of the remarks, saying that Salehi carries little policy making influence in Tehran.


Middle East

  • The leader of the Syrian opposition met with representatives of the United States and Russia on the sidelines of a Munich security conference.
  • The Israeli army said it arrested 25 members of Hamas, including three parliamentarians, in overnight operations in the West Bank.
  • An Egyptian opposition party said one of its members had been tortured to death by police, the latest in a string of police brutality cases in Egypt.

Asia

  • Amid reports of an imminent North Korean nuclear test, the United States and South Korea held a joint a naval exercise.
  • A Vietnamese court sentenced 22 people to jail on subversion charges as the government continues a crackdown on dissent.
  • Huge crowds gathered in Pnomh Penh for the cremation of former king Norodom Sihanouk.

Africa

  • A U.N. court in Rwanda overturned the conviction of two former ministers on charges they were complicit in the country's genocide.
  • Niger confirmed that French special forces are guarding one of the country's largest uranium mines.
  • Rebels in Senegal's Casamance region killed at least four people, including one Frenchman, in an attack on a bank in southern Senegal.

Europe

  • The leader of Spain's opposition called on Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy to resign amid allegations that he received under the table payments.
  • Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne said that banks that fail to "ring-fence" their risky banking activities from their day-to-day operations will be broken up.
  • Archaeologists confirmed that the remains of King Richard III have been found underneath a Leicester parking lot.

Americas

  • Paraguyan presidential candidate Lino Oviedo died in a helicopter crash north of the capital Asuncion.
  • According to National Assembly Speaker Diosdado Cabello, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez's health is "clearly improving."
  • Cuban leader Fidel Castro was seen in public for the first time in several months when he voted in Cuban parliamentary elections.



AFP/GETTY
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