Tag: JNIM

  • Mali Update: MoD killed; sporadic clashes ongoing across the country.

    Mali Update: MoD killed; sporadic clashes ongoing across the country.

    Five days ago on April 25th, armed Tuareg militia groups coordinated with Al-Qaeda Sahel affiliate Jihadist group and launched a coordinated attack on strategic positions across Mali, striking government and military sites and  several key cities. These attacks forced the withdrawal of the Russian Africa Corp and Malian armed forces from several of the cities they were defending. 

    Since the initial attack it’s been reported that the countries Minister of Defense–Sadio Camara, was killed by a suicide truck bombing that targeted his residence  in the town of Kati, a suburb of the capital in Bamako. Government spokesman Issa Ousmane Coulibaly read a statement on state tv in the aftermath that said Camera was killed when “a vehicle laden with explosives and driven by a suicide attacker targeted the minister’s residence”.

    Minister of Defense for Mali Junta, Sadio Camara.

    The statement went on to say that Camera had killed several of his attackers in an exchange of gunfire before the explosion. The explosion collapsed Cameras residence and also destroyed a nearby mosque, killing a number of worshippers. Mali state TV also reported three members of Camera’s family also died in the attack. 

    Mali’s current leader is said to be in hiding in the aftermath of the attack, at this time nobody has seen or heard from him, many believe him to have been killed in the attack but that is not confirmed. Regional African sources report he was present in Kati at the time of the attack but was moved by military convoy to Samanko camp, a camp for the special forces men he once commanded before taking power in the coup. Had he been killed it’s very likely the group responsible would have taken credit for it. 

    (Update: Gen Assimi Goita is confirmed to be alive. His office photographed him in a meeting with Russian ambassador, Igor Gromyko.) 

    Assimi Goïta, President of Mali

    Attacks were reported in the capital city of Bamako in the south, and Gao and Kidal in the North. While the government claimed a successful defense, videos were released from Gao and Kidal showing Malian and/ Russian forces pulling out while being filmed by the attack militias. 

    Multiple videos and reports from the region indicate that the Tuareg rebels have taken complete control of Kidal. This is a large strategic hub in the north of the country and is also considered a homeland of the Tuareg people.

    Background

    General Goïta led two coups, one in August 2020 which resulted in the ousting elected President Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta amid massive protests over corruption and failure to stop the insurgency and another in May 2021 when he removed the interim civilian president. The Junta and General Goïta promised a quick return to civilian rule and elections but instead, the junta consolidated power. In July 2025, a transitional parliament granted Goïta a renewable five-year presidential term.

    Mali has been in a near-continuous war since a 2012 Tuareg rebellion in the north. This was focused mostly on the Azawad region. This rebellion was hijacked by jihadists, leading to French intervention, a 2015 peace deal, and repeated flare-ups. The country remains deeply divided: the south (Bamako/Kati) is the political/military heartland, while the north and center are contested by separatists and jihadists. Do

    The junta expelled French forces (Operation Barkhane) in August of 2022 and UN peacekeepers (MINUSMA) in June of 2023, citing ineffectiveness. They turned to Russia for security help, Russia sent infamous mercenary company Wagner Group which arrived sometime in 2022 then Wagner was rebranded/replaced by the Russian state-linked Africa Corps after the death of Yevgeny Prigozhin. Russian forces have fought alongside Malian troops against both jihadists and Tuareg rebels, helping retake some northern areas (Kidal in 2023).Results, however,  have been limited with violence persisting and widespread accusations of civilian abuses. On top of everything, the junta has faced growing isolation from the West and ECOWAS. 

    Footage released by the Russian African Corps showing their fighting in Mali over the last few days.

    The fighting is still ongoing. Looking at reports from all sides we are able to get a sense of where the current hotspots still remain. 

    -Northern Mali. 

    (Kidal, Gao, Sévaré/Mopti areas)

    Clashes continue. Tuareg rebels (FLA) m claim control of Kidal and parts of Gao and other towns. Russia’s Africa Corps confirmed it withdrew from Kidal on April 27 after heavy fighting, alongside Malian troops. Rebels say they are holding positions across the north in areas like Goa and near Timbuktu.

     

    -Bamako and Kati

    Malian authorities say they have largely repelled the main assaults and describe a “fragile calm” in the capital and Kati military base. However, multiple eyewitness and social-media reports from April 27th describe heavy gunfire, several large explosions, and drone sightings near Sénou International Airport (just south of Bamako). Flights have resumed but remain limited.

    Today (April 30th), video footage shows that JNIM fighters have taken the town of Hombori, in the area of central Mali.

    Bamako has seen sporadic fighting in the lead up to this large attack, often supply routes would be attacked. In 2024 JNIM launched an attack that targeted Malian Army and Wagner Group bases, a gendarmerie training center in Faladie, and areas near Modibo Keita International Airport. Until now this was the largest attack on Junta targets since the coup.

    In 2025 JNIM enforced a months-long fuel blockade by attacking tankers and supply routes from Côte d’Ivoire, Senegal, and elsewhere. This created a de facto siege on Bamako and southern Mali, causing severe fuel shortages, blackouts, long lines for fuel and food, and economic hardship. It was designed to pressure the junta without needing to attack the city directly. 

    Pro-government and Junta sources insist that the military beat back the attackers on all fronts however no new footage or other evidence has been released that gives credit to those claims and in fact, the evidence we do have aadds more support to the contrary.