Ghislaine Dupont, left, and Claude Verlon reportedly were abducted after interviewing a rebel leader in Kidal, Mali.

Story highlights

NEW: The journalists were abducted after interviewing a rebel, RFI reports

French President Francois Hollande calls the killings "despicable"

The French Foreign Ministry confirms the deaths

The journalists worked for Radio France International

CNN  — 

French President Francois Hollande called an emergency meeting with ministers Sunday, a day after two French journalists were killed in northern Mali.

The two Radio France International reporters were kidnapped Saturday morning after conducting interviews with a Tuareg rebel near the northern town of Kidal, a local governor said, according to RFI sister network France Info.

Both were kidnapped by four men in a Toyota, said Gov. Adama Kamissoko of Kidal.

Kidal was one of the strongholds of the Islamic militant Tuareg uprising last year that plunged Mali into chaos after a military-led coup. Following the coup, Tuareg rebels occupied the northern half of the country.

As part of France’s intervention this year to flush out militants in Mali, the French military secured the area around Kidal. Hollande called an emergency meeting with ministers Sunday after the killings.

The two reporters were abducted in front of the home of a member of the Tuareg rebels’ National Movement of a Liberation of Azawad, RFI reported.

The two journalists could be heard resisting their abduction, according to their driver, who was forced by the gunmen to lay on the ground, RFI said.

Hollande condemned the killings, calling them “despicable.”

The kidnappings and deaths came the same week four French hostages were released. They were abducted in 2010 by al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb in neighboring Niger.