

Armed violence in Mali has escalated, with an al-Qaeda-linked group attacking military bases and taking control of Kidal. The Malian Defence Minister was killed at his home, and armed groups are now laying siege to Bamako.
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Armed violence has intensified in Mali since Saturday after an al-Qaeda-linked armed group working with separatists attacked several military bases across multiple cities, including areas where senior government officials live, and took control of the northern city of Kidal.
Malian Defence Minister Sadio Camara and his family were killed in their home in Kati, a military garrison close to the capital, Bamako, the government announced on Sunday. Armed groups have announced that they are laying siege to Bamako.
Mali has been beset by security crises since at least 2012. Al-Qaeda-linked Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM) controls swaths of rural territory, especially in the north and central regions, and has active cells around the capital. Similarly, the ISIL (ISIS) affiliate in Sahel Province (ISSP) controls areas in northeastern Menaka city.
At the same time, armed Tuareg separatists of the Liberation Front for Azawad (FLA) group, fighting for an independent nation called Azawad, also in the north, are clashing with the military and allied Russian mercenaries who have been deployed since 2021. They control Kidal now, along with the JNIM, but they also want Gao, the largest city in the north, Menaka and Timbuktu, to complete the self-declared state of Azawad.
These groups sometimes work together: they operate in the same areas and draw from the same pool of fighters from aggrieved communities. On Saturday, the JNIM worked with the FLA against the army.
But who are the faces behind them? Here is a breakdown of who is who in the Mali crisis:
Assimi Goita: Colonel Goita, 42, is the country’s head of state. He helped the military seize power in 2020, removing the civilian government and promising to end the crisis as security deteriorated. In May 2021, he again launched a coup, this time removing the civilian members of the cabinet and installing himself as president. Although Goita initially promised to hold elections, he has since gone quiet on that front. Under him, Mali’s foreign policy has been increasingly nationalist: his government has cut off ties with the regional bloc, ECOWAS, which pressured it to hold elections. It has also cut ties with former colonial power France and evicted French troops, as well as 15,000 United Nations peacekeepers. In their place, Mali has turned to Russian mercenaries for defence. Mali also restarted an on-and-off conflict with Tuareg separatists.

Sadio Camara and his family were killed in their home in Kati, near the capital Bamako.
The violence involves al-Qaeda-linked Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM), the ISIL affiliate in Sahel Province (ISSP), and Tuareg separatists from the Liberation Front for Azawad (FLA).
Armed groups control significant portions of northern Mali, including Kidal, Gao, Menaka, and Timbuktu.
Since 2012, Mali has faced ongoing security crises, with various armed groups gaining control over rural territories and escalating violence against the government.


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Assimi Goita visits wounded civilians and military personnel in Bamako, Mali [Handout/Mali Presidency via Reuters]
Sadio Camara: Killed on Saturday in the heavily fortified Kati, General Camara was the defence minister and a key official. He was 47. Camara actively took part in the 2020 coup. When he was sidelined by the civilian cabinet and replaced as defence minister, Goita launched a total coup in 2021 and reinstated him. Camara was the brain behind the Mali-Russia partnership and helped facilitate the arrival of Russian mercenaries from the Wagner Group, who were replaced by a Russian Defence Ministry unit called Africa Corps. Mali observed two days of mourning following his assassination.

Colonel Sadio Camara at an Alliance of Sahel States meeting in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, on February 15, 2024 [Fanny Naoro-Kabr/AFP]
Abdoulaye Maiga – Lieutenant-Colonel Maiga, 44, has served as prime minister since 2022. He did not take part in the coups, but is a close ally of Goita and reputed to be the main voice behind the scenes, pushing for a break with France. He studied in Algeria and France, where he earned a doctorate. Maiga formerly worked with the UN and ECOWAS, from which Mali has distanced itself.

Mali’s Prime Minister Abdoulaye Maiga addressed the 77th session of the UN General Assembly [File: Eduardo Munoz/Reuters]
Russian mercenaries have been fighting alongside the Malian army since 2021. There are about 2,000 Russian fighters in the country at present, with another 400 or so others in neighbouring, military-led Niger and Burkina Faso.
They were initially deployed as members of the Wagner Group. In 2023, Wagner head Yevgeny Prigozhin died, and Russia integrated the group into its Defence Ministry as the Africa Corps, which is also present in the Central African Republic, Libya, and, reportedly, in Sudan. Field commanders are hardly known, with only small details emerging.

Russian mercenaries boarding a helicopter in northern Mali [File: French Army via AP]
Tuareg separatists have been fighting for freedom even before Mali gained independence in 1960. There have been several waves of rebellions since – the 1960s, 90s and 2012. The FLA is the latest iteration of the separatist movements. It was formed in 2024 after previous movements merged.

Tuareg fighters from the National Movement for the Liberation of the Azawad in a market in Timbuktu, Mali, on April 14, 2012 [AP Photo]