Mali’s junta terminated a 2015 peace agreement with Tuareg separatist rebels, potentially intensifying instability in the conflict-ridden West African nation.
The resurgence of tensions between central authorities and northern separatist followed military coups in 2020 and 2021, collaboration with Russian military contractor Wagner Group, and the expulsion of French forces and U.N. peacekeepers.
The military, in a televised statement, cited non-compliance by other signatories and “hostile acts” by chief mediator Algeria, rendering the United Nations-brokered Algiers Accord unfeasible.
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The government “announces its end with immediate effect,” it said of the agreement.
The CMA, an alliance of rebel groups formed by Mali’s semi-nomadic Tuareg people, said it was not surprised by the decision.
“We have been expecting it since they brought in Wagner, chased out MINUSMA (the U.N. peacekeeping group) and started hostilities by attacking our positions on the ground,” said CMA spokesperson Elmaouloud Ramadane.
“We knew that the aim was to terminate the agreement,” he said.
Mali, on the Sahara Desert’s southern fringe, has been plagued by violence since 2012, when Islamist militants hijacked an uprising by the Tuareg groups who complained of government neglect and sought autonomy for the desert region they call Azawad.
The Tuaregs signed the peace accord with the Bamako government in 2015, but the militant groups linked to al Qaeda and Islamic State have killed thousands of civilians in insurgencies that have since spread to neighbouring Burkina Faso and Niger.
The Tuareg peace agreement had recently come under increasing strain. Fighting between the two sides picked up again since last August as they jostle for position during the gradual withdrawal of U.N. peacekeepers.
In early January, the U.N. Security Council warned of the importance of sticking with the 2015 peace deal and called for all parties to resume dialogue.
Any escalation with the separatists would pile extra pressure on the Malian army, which is already struggling in the fight against Islamist groups with violence worse since the military takeover.