Optimism and strife to greet Canadian peacekeepers as they arrive in Mali
BAMAKO, Mali — When Canada’s first peacekeepers to this West African nation arrive at their new home Sunday, they will find a country riven by rampant poverty, internal divisions and strife — but where sprigs of optimism exist.
Driving through the streets of Bamako, even an experienced traveller is struck by the poverty: children in rags begging at car windows, garbage filling open ditches on either side of the road, rusty cars and rundown buildings.
The heat is bearable but sticky — a good day, says one local — while dust from the red dirt fills the air and lungs and coats surfaces. Then there is the smell: burning garbage, diesel and exhaust.
While the dozen Canadian soldiers scheduled to fly into the United Nations’ base outside the northern city of Gao are the first to deploy to the country, Canada has actually been a player in Mali since the 1970s.


