Mali’s military rulers on Sunday faced a security crisis after coordinated nationwide attacks by jihadist fighters and separatist rebels this weekend killed the defense minister and reportedly left a key northern town in rebel hands.
There was no word from junta leader General Assimi Goita, who has not been seen since the attacks began at dawn on Saturday.
The offensive, synchronized by Tuareg rebels of the Azawad Liberation Front (FLA) coalition and the jihadist Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims, targeted several areas in the vast arid nation.
Photo: AP
Analysts said the coordinated attacks were the most serious challenge to the nation’s rulers since the March 2012 offensive that was repelled by the intervention of French forces, who have since left.
Government troops were still fighting in some parts of the country, but the loss of Malian Minister of Defense Sadio Camara on Saturday represented a serious blow to the administration.
Camara, his second wife and two of his grandchildren died after a car bomb attack on his home in the junta stronghold of Kati, outside Bamako, his family and an official said.
A government statement issued on Sunday said that Camara had died while fighting his attackers “some of whom he succeeded in neutralizing.”
The general died of his wounds in hospital and would receive a national funeral, the statement added.
There was still fighting on Sunday in several areas, including Kati, the northern towns of Kidal and Gao, as well as Severe in central Mali.
Tuareg rebels said that they had reached an agreement allowing Russian Africa Corps forces backing Mali’s army to withdraw from the northern city of Kidal, which they claimed was “totally” under their control.
“We saw a military convoy leave, but don’t know the details of what’s happening. Fighters from armed movements have now taken over the streets,” one resident said.
Mali’s army had recaptured Kidal, a Tuareg stronghold, in November 2023 with the help of Russia’s Wagner paramilitary group, ending more than a decade of control by rebels. The FLA, made up of mainly Tuareg groups who want independence for Azawad, a territory in northern Mali, also said it had taken positions in the northern Gao region.
Mali has been ravaged for more than a decade by conflict and jihadist violence, but Saturday’s attacks were the worst since 2020, when the junta seized power.
The situation in Sevare, central Mali, where gunfire could still be heard, remained “confused,” one local official said.
While there has been no word from or sighting of Goita, a Malian security source said that he was in a safe place.
By Sunday, the international airport, just outside the capital, Bamako, was operating again, after heavy fighting on Saturday in the outlying district of Senou.
“I still hear the blasts ringing in my ears. It’s traumatizing,” one resident said.
In Bamako, troops had blocked access to military facilities with barriers and tires on the roads, a journalist said.
The opposition Coalition of Forces for the Republic, in a statement said that Mali was “in danger.”
The junta had “promised Malians security, stability and the return of the state” it said.
After the weekend offensive, nobody could seriously claim that Mali was either pacified or secure, it added.
The Alliance of Sahel States denounced the attacks in a statement as “a monstrous plot backed by the enemies of the liberation of the Sahel.”
The AES comprises the three junta-led West African states of Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres condemned “acts of violence” in Mali, his spokesman said in a statement.
“The Secretary-General calls for coordinated international support to address the evolving threat of violent extremism and terrorism in the Sahel and to meet urgent humanitarian needs,” spokesman Stephane Dujarric added.
The EU on Sunday condemned the “terrorist attacks” in Mali. Russia’s Africa Corps, an organization under the direct control of the Russian Ministry of Defense, has taken over from the mercenary Wagner group in helping Malian forces fight jihadists.
Mali has resources including gold and other valuable minerals. Mali’s rulers, like their military counterparts in neighboring Niger and Burkina Faso, have severed ties with former colonial ruler France and several Western nations, moving closer to Russia.
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