Southern Mali's suspected jihadist leader has been arrested by special forces and transferred to the capital Bamako, security sources said today.
"Souleymane Keita, the top jihadist leader in the south of the country, was arrested a few days ago on the Mauritanian border, and transferred to Bamako on Wednesday," a security source said.
Another security source said the arrest, near the town of Sokolo, followed the capture of one of his allies a few months ago in the centre of the country.
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Malian intelligence has said Keita and Ag Ghaly fought side by side in 2012 when jihadist forces seized the vast northern stretches of Mali.
But when French troops stepped in to oust the Islamists in January 2013, Keita headed south to his native region to set up a new group, the Khaled Ibn al-Walid "katiba", meaning combattant unit.
The group, also known as "Ansar Dine of the South", has some 200 fighters, a Malian security source said.
In March 2015, security services accused him of heading a jihadist military training camp discovered outside Bamako.
Keita was also accused last year of attacks in Fakola and Misseni near the Ivory Coast border and of "terrorist attacks" in the capital.