Mali accuses military officers of working with jihadis

Photo credit: BBC

Some  military officers in Mali worked with jihads and separatists who recently launched their biggest round of attacks in over a decade in the conflict-battered country, authorities have said.

The Associated Press reports that the separatist fighters had said earlier in the day that they captured a strategic military camp in the northern town of Tessalit after the withdrawal of Mali’s  army and its Russian allies from there.

The claim by the Azawad Liberation Front separatist group was the latest setback for Mali’s ruling junta, which lost control of the major city of Kidal earlier in the week as part of the attacks that killed Malian defence Minister Sadio Camara.

Mali has been run by the military since a 2020 coup and has long suffered violence as jihadi groups expand in surrounding territories in the wider Sahel region south of the Sahara Desert, which is known as the global hotspot for violent extremism.

The latest assault in the West African nation began Saturday after al-Qaida-backed Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin, or JNIM, and the Azawad Liberation Front, or FLA, partnered to target the main international airport in the capital, Bamako, as well as other Malian towns and cities in near-simultaneous attacks, with the fighters riding on motorcycles and trucks.

A statement from the public prosecutor at the Military Court of Bamako, which was read on state television on Friday, noted that investigations found “solid evidence regarding the complicity of certain military personnel” in the attacks, including serving and recently dismissed officers.  

The officers participated in “the planning, coordination, and execution” of the attacks, the prosecutor’s statement said, while also alleging the involvement of politicians, including Oumar ariko, a prominent Malian politician in exile. 

Before the arrival of the FLA fighters Friday, the Malian army analitd members of Russia’s Africa Corp reportedly pulled out of the Tessalit  military camp, which is strategically located near an airport and the border with Algeria.

At least 10 locations have been attacked  by the militants since  the latest assault began, forcing Malian and Russian forces to withdraw from the key northern city of Kidal, which was once a stronghold of the separatists.

The jihadis have at various times in recent days blocked roads leading to Mali’s capital Bamako, further squeezing the city that already was facing a fuel blockade imposed by the militants last year.

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