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France says ‘plausible’ al-Qaeda killed journalists in Mali

Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) claimed responsibility for murders

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French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said it was 'plausible' the journalists had been killed by al-Qaeda. Photo: AP

France said on Thursday that al-Qaeda’s north African branch may have killed two French journalists in Mali at the weekend, as the group had earlier claimed.

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“We’re in the process of verifying it, but it seems plausible,” French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius told French television, referring to the claim over the murders of Ghislaine Dupont and Claude Verlon in the flashpoint northeastern town of Kidal on Saturday.

Dupont, 57, and Verlon, 55, were kidnapped and shot dead after interviewing a spokesman for Tuareg separatists in Kidal.

Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) said in a statement published online on Wednesday that the killings were “the minimum debt” owed by France and its leaders “in return for their new crusade” in Paris’s former colony.

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Mali has been the target of a series of attacks claimed by Islamist insurgents since France launched a military operation in January against al-Qaeda-linked groups including AQIM occupying the north of the country.

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