Tuareg Blues is perhaps the most internationally known of Tuareg musical styles.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Tuareg is not an Ethnos, accessed 2 February 2004, available on Internet Archive.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Tuareg rebels meanwhile advanced from the north, seizing the city of Timbuktu.
From the economist.com
Tuareg broadswords were no match for the more advanced weapons of French squadrons.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Tuareg rebels are determined to keep control of the region, which they call Azawad.
From the france24.com
Tuareg spokesmen say this rebellion, unlike those in the past, will not run out of steam.
From the economist.com
Tuareg stranded in the capital Bamako speak of hostility toward them.
From the cnn.com
Tuareg moved south on the continent in the 11th century AD, taking slaves from other groups.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Tuareg refugees at Mentao South camp in northern Burkina Faso.
From the guardian.co.uk
More examples
A member of a nomadic Berber people of the Sahara
The dialect of Berber spoken by the Tuareg
The Tuareg (also Twareg or Touareg, Berber: Imuhagh, besides regional ethnyms) are a Berber nomadic pastoralist people. They are the principal inhabitants of the Saharan interior of North Africa. ...
Tuareg (or Tamasheq/Tamajaq/Tamahaq) is a Berber language or family of very closely related languages and dialects spoken by the Tuareg Berbers, in large parts of Mali, Niger, Algeria, Libya and Burkina Faso, with a few speakers, the Kinnin, in Chad.
A Berber nation that roams the Sahara, from Mauritania to the borders of Egypt. Some of them are known as the "Blue People", in reference to the fact that their clothes are colored with powdered indigo stones, some of which rubs off and remains on their skin, dying it blue.