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TORONTO — An al-Qaida faction has claimed responsibility for missile strikes aimed at U.N. forces in Mali as the Canadian government is poised to announce details of its peacekeeping deployment to Africa.

Photos posted on social media by Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb show two Grad missiles being fired at Timbuktu airport Tuesday, targeting what it called “French forces that invaded the lands of the Muslims.”

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We give the French invading forces and their henchmen glad tidings of more strikes with permission from Allah

At Gao airport, the UN peacekeeping office was destroyed Tuesday by an explosive-laden truck, Reuters reported. The armed group Ansar Dine claimed to have attacked a French armored vehicle with a mine Sunday.

Nobody was killed in the attacks but the intensification of the Islamist insurgency comes as the government is expected to announce it will contribute 600 soldiers and 150 police officers to a peacekeeping mission in Mali.

“We give the French invading forces and their henchmen glad tidings of more strikes with permission from Allah,” according to a translation of AQIM’s statement by the SITE Intelligence Group.