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  2. Tuareg people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuareg_people

    Tuareg are distinguished in their native language as the Imouhar, meaning the free people; [citation needed] the overlap of meaning has increased local cultural nationalism. Many Tuareg today are either settled agriculturalists or nomadic cattle breeders, while others are blacksmiths or caravan leaders.

  3. Festival au Désert - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Festival_au_Désert

    This tradition, known as the Takoubelt in Kidal and Temakannit in Timbuktu, was an annual meeting of Tuareg tribes of the region, where they played and shared music as well as discussing problems and resolving conflicts. However the Festival au Désert aimed to bridge the gap between tradition and modernity, and to broaden understanding of ...

  4. Ubari conflict - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ubari_conflict

    The Tuareg mobilized in Ghat, and Sabha, bringing several hundred of its fighters to Ubari. [ 3 ] On 23 November 2015, Qatar mediated a ceasefire between the Tuareg and Tubu; both groups agreed to withdraw from Ubari, and allowed for Arab tribesmen of the Hasawna tribe to enter the city to act as peacekeepers.

  5. Toubou people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toubou_people

    Which spans from the Fezzan (Phazania) as far south as Nubia. Further evidence is given by Harold MacMichael states that the Bayuda desert was still known as the desert of Goran; a name as MacMichael has shown, connected with the Kura'án of today. This reaffirms that the Kura'án (Goran) of today, occupy much of the same territory as the ...

  6. Kaocen revolt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaocen_revolt

    Ag Mohammed Wau Teguidda Kaocen (1880–1919) was the Tuareg leader of the rising against the French. An adherent to the militantly anti-French Sanusiya Sufi religious order, Kaocen was the Amenokal (chief) of the Ikazkazan Tuareg confederation. Kaocen had engaged in numerous, mostly indecisive, attacks on French colonial forces from at least 1909.

  7. Rock engravings of Oued Djerat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rock_engravings_of_Oued_Djerat

    After having raised the paintings of Tassili in 1956–1957, Henri Lhote, encouraged by the General de Gaulle and several ministers, [3] undertakes in 1959, at the head of a team of five people to which several Tuareg collaborators are added, to make an inventory of the engravings of Oued Djerat (which he will see again in 1969 and 1970). [4]

  8. Tuareg militias of Ghat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuareg_militias_of_Ghat

    Clashes between Tuareg and Tebu tribal militias have repeatedly flared in Ubari at various times during October 2014. [5] The Tebu tribes are affiliated with the Tobruk government in East Libya. On November 5, 2014, a Tuareg militia reportedly seized control of the El Sharara oil field in Fezzan.

  9. Idehan Ubari - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idehan_Ubari

    The Ubari Desert, Idehan Ubari, Idehan Awbari (Idehan means fine sand in Tamasheq [1]) or Ubari Erg is an erg in the hyper-arid Fezzan region of southwestern Libya with a surface area of approximately 58,000 km 2. [2] The area of the Ubari desert has been traditionally inhabited by Tuareg people, a Berber ethnic and traditionally nomadic ...