Mali
Mali | AfrikaZIF kompakt
MINUSMA 2023: In Zukunft größer, gleich groß (aber anders)
oder klein (und politisch)? | 05/2023
EUTM 2022: Erzwungener Umzug von Bamako nach Niamey | 05/2022
MINUSMA 2022: Zwischen Söldnern und Sanktionen, Putschisten und Extremisten | 05/2022
ZIF kompakt spezial | Mali - Aktuelle Entwicklungen | 03/2022
MINUSMA 2021: Transition, Reform, Terror und Corona | 04/2021
EUTM Mali 2021: Erweiterter Einsatz in der Krisenregion | 04/2021
ZIF kompakt spezial | Diese Woche im Sicherheitsrat: MINUSMA | 06/2019
MINUSMA 2019: Stillstand im Norden, Krise in der Mitte von Mali | 05/2019
EUTM Mali 2019: Erfolgreich im Rahmen des Mandats | 05/2019
MINUSMA 2018: Wahlen, Friedensprozess und Terroranschläge | 04/2018
MINUSMA: Die UN-Mission in Mali im Wahljahr 2018 | 11/2017
EUSTAMS Mali - Ein Novum im EU-Krisenmanagement | 09/2017
MINUSMA in Mali: Europäisches Engagement bei der UN für Frieden im Sahel | 06/2015
EU-Missionen in Afrika: EUCAP Sahel Niger und EUCAP Sahel Mali | 05/2014
Aktuelle Einsätze
EUCAP Sahel Mali
EU Capacity Building Mission in Mali (EU)
Mandatiert seit: 04/14
Zum Einsatz
MISAHEL
African Union Mission to Mali und the Sahel (AU)
Mandatiert seit: 08/13
Zum Einsatz
News
Strengthening the social contract, tackling governance failures, and replacing a counterterrorism imperative with a focus on human security are long overdue in the Western Sahel.
Five Sahel countries work together to address common security challenges. The EU's Regional Advisory and Coordination Cell (RACC), a network of European experts, supports the security and defence cooperation of these five “G5 Sahel” countries’ by initiating and facilitating joint regional activities. The civilian and military CSDP Missions deployed in Mali and Niger play the central role in the concrete implementation of these activities.
Less than a week after a key summit gathering of France and its five regional military partners in the Sahel conflict, fresh casualties in Niger offered a reality check to the high-level discourse on achievements.
Mali's interim Prime Minister Moctar Ouane has created a platform in order to open talks with the Islamist militants who have wreaked havoc in the north of the country. … France, Mali's former colonial power, has 5,000 troops in Mali in order to combat the ongoing insurgency. It has said in the past that it did not agree with Mali opening negotiations with insurgents who did not sign the 2015 peace deal.
The UN Secretary-General has underlined his concern for Africa’s Sahel region, where deteriorating security and violence are aggravating an already difficult humanitarian situation that is unfolding amid the COVID-19 pandemic and climate emergency. António Guterres addressed heads of State from the Group of Five for the Sahel, known by the diplomatic shorthand G5 Sahel’, meeting on Tuesday during their summit this week in Chad.
President Emmanuel Macron has ruled out an immediate drawdown in France’s 5,100-strong Barkhane forces battling armed groups in the Sahel region of West Africa, describing a rushed exit as a mistake. Macron said he was pushing back a decision on a troop reduction after a virtual summit of the so-called G5 Sahel countries – Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania, Niger – and their allies to discuss the future of their military campaign in the region.
Chadian forces head to flashpoint border zone between Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso as violence rages.
Secretary-General António Guterres condemned on Saturday, a “complex attack” against the UN mission in the West African country of Mali. An assault on Thursday by unidentified armed elements on a temporary operating base of the UN Integrated Stabilization Mission for Mali (MINUSMA) in Kerena, near Douentza in Central Mali, resulted in the death of a Togolese peacekeeper and the wounding of 27 others.
Some 20 UN peacekeepers serving with the UN Stabilization Mission in Mali, MINUSMA, were injured on Wednesday, after their temporary base came under attack in the restive central region of the country.
Since 2013, when it sent troops to Mali, France has led international efforts to root out Islamist militancy from the Sahel. Yet the jihadist threat has grown. Paris and its partners should reorient their military-centred approach toward helping improve governance in the region.