BAMAKO, Mali
The United States has lamented worsening violence in Mali as the UN Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission (Minusma) begins its withdrawal earlier than scheduled.
The UN Mission is withdrawing
from the restive West African nation on the request of the military-led transition government which
accused it of being part of the over a decade long conflict that has created
one of the largest humanitarian crises in the world.
The Minusma says its forces
have become target by Mali’s security forces, compelling it to bring forward
the planned withdrawal of its Blue Helmets.
In a statement on August 13,
Minusma announced that three of its soldiers were wounded when they came under
fire twice as they departed a major base in the town of Ber in the north of the
country.
At the same time, the Malian
army said six of its soldiers died and 24 alleged terrorist fighters killed in
a skirmish in the area.
The US State Department said
that incident highlighted the threat of violence in the country and the
importance of all parties in the conflict to settle their differences
peacefully and in accordance with the 2015 Algiers Peace Accord.
“It is critical that Minusma be
permitted to conduct its withdrawal in a safe and orderly manner, and we call
on the transition government to cooperate fully until the final Minusma element
departs,” US State Department spokesman Mathew Miller said in a statement,
adding: “Attacks on UN peacekeepers are unacceptable, and we condemn such
violence and the larger threat posed by armed actors operating throughout Mali.
We stand with the people of Mali in support of a future defined by peace,
security, and prosperity.”
The United Nations Security
Council voted unanimously on June 30, 2023 to pull out the over 11, 000
strong hybrid forces in the country after Mali’s government accused them of
fuelling tensions in the conflict and ordering their removal from the country.
That marked the climax of the
fallout between the junta and Western countries over the prosecution of the war
against Islamist insurgents, which has long spilled over to the wider Sahel
region.
According to the UN, the
conflicts has created over 4 million displaced people in the region, as at the
end of 2022.
The involvement of the
Russia-backed Wagner group in the conflict further complicated relations
between Mali and Western nations, especially France which had the largest
number of troops in the country.
Mali experienced two coups in
the last three years in relation to the crisis. The last coup worsened
relations to a point of causing the breakup of ties with former colonial
master, leading to the expulsion of French troops.
Mali has been under pressure
from the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas) to transfer the
country back to democratic rule. The West African bloc lifted sanctions on the
landlocked country in July 2022, after reaching an agreement on a transition
plan that will see elections conducted on February 4, 2024.
Mali has since conducted a
referendum, the results of which saw the approval of a new constitution which
opponents say will give excessive powers to the president.
The UN troops withdrawal was
supposed to be fully completed by December 31.
The issue was discussed by
Ecowas leaders at the 63rd Ordinary Session of the Heads of State summit on 9th
July in Bissau, Guinea Bissau, where a Presidential Task Force, comprising
Benin, Guinea-Bissau and Nigeria, with the support of Niger, was constituted to
“deepen regional reflections” the situation and all its related security
matters.
The Task Force, known as The
Troika+1, was specifically tasked with accompanying the Ecowas mediators to
sustain dialogue with the transition authorities in Mali and neighbours Burkina
Faso and Guinea, which are also under military rule and are being pressured to
return to democracy.
A summit of the Task Force
chaired by Nigeria’s President Bola Tinubu on July 18 resolved to continue with
the negotiations under the leadership of Benin’s President, Patrice Talon.
Mr Talon was tasked to undertake consultative visits to the three countries as part of efforts to ensure the conduct of “credible and inclusive” democratic elections.
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