From the Independent:The image of Mali has long been a gentle one. It is a land of magical  music and mouth-watering mangoes, of mud mosques and medieval  manuscripts. A country dripping with history and culture that was slowly  forcing its way on to the tourist map for Western visitors. Now,  following the intervention of French warplanes nine days ago, it will be  more associated in most people's minds with Islamic militancy.
This is a tragic twist for a people whose faith revolves around the  more tolerant strands of Sufism. For all its poverty, Mali has  traditionally been open to outsiders. It is a nation where women are  prominent and musicians more closely entwined with everyday life than  perhaps any other place on earth. Music has long been part of the social  and political fabric, from praise singers who, for centuries, passed on  the oral history to the state-funded bands used to bond the nation  after independence.
When I first went there almost a decade ago,  it was for the famous Festival in the Desert, some 50 miles from  Timbuktu and a symbol of reconciliation after a previous Tuareg  uprising. It took three days to get there; Westerners reaching the event  were treated like old friends. Days were spent sheltering from fierce  sun in tents, chatting over cups of sweet tea and biscuits. At night,  those amazing musicians who have taken Malian music around the globe  performed in front of turbaned tribesmen on camels while burning  braziers lit up the desert. An unforgettable experience. 
Where once there was music and dancing, today there is misery and deprivation
More here. 
 
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