Russian troops deploy to Mali’s Timbuktu after French exit
Mali’s army spokesperson has said Russian soldiers have
deployed to the northern city of Timbuktu to train Malian forces at a base
vacated by French troops last month amid persistent insecurity in a country
where large swaths of territory are out of the government’s control.
The Malian government said late last year that “Russian
trainers” had arrived in the country, but Bamako and Moscow have so far
provided few details on the deployment, including on how many soldiers are
involved or the Russian troops’ precise mission.
On December 23, a group of Western countries led by former
colonial power France, which in 2013 intervened militarily to help push back
advancing armed groups that threatened to seize the whole of Mali, sharply
criticised what they said was the deployment of Russian mercenaries working for
the controversial Wagner Group.
Mali’s government has denied this, saying the Russian troops
are in the country as part of a bilateral agreement.
“We had new acquisitions of planes and equipment from them
[the Russians],” the Mali army spokesperson told Reuters on Thursday. “It costs
a lot less to train us on site than for us to go over there … What is the
harm?”
He did not say how many Russians had been sent to Timbuktu.
Residents told Reuters that uniformed Russian men were seen
driving around town but could not say how many there were.
The Russian forces’ arrival in Mali follows deployments to
several other African hotspots, part of what analysts say is an attempt by
Moscow to recover influence on the continent after a long absence following the
Soviet Union’s collapse in 1991.
Mali has been plagued by a conflict that began as a
separatist movement in the north of the country in 2012, but devolved into a
multitude of armed groups jockeying for control in the central and northern
regions.
Fighting has spread to neighbouring countries, including
Burkina Faso and Niger, with the deteriorating security situation in the region
unleashing an acute humanitarian crisis.
The withdrawal of French troops from Timbuktu, a city they
helped to recapture from al-Qaeda fighters in 2013, is part of a significant
drawdown of a previously 5,000-strong task force in West Africa’s Sahel region.
The French government said it would refocus its military efforts on
neutralising rebel operations, and strengthening and training local armies.
The decision came amid mounting political instability in
Mali, where Colonel Assimi Goita carried out two coups in less than a year
before being sworn in as the country’s interim president. The
military-dominated government initially committed to holding elections by the
end of February 2022, but has now proposed a transition period lasting between
six months and five years.
The reports over the Wagner deployment in recent months has
further strained already tense ties between the French government and the coup
makers. The rising tensions have also come at a time when anti-French sentiment
has become widely popular among Malians who accuse Paris of failing to contain
the escalating violence and pursuing a hidden agenda.
The French military already has shut down its bases further
north in Kidal and Tessalit but is maintaining its presence in Gao near a
volatile border region where operations have been concentrated in recent years.
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