BAMAKO:Mali’s military rulers announced late Thursday the “end, with immediate effect” of a key 2015 peace deal signed with northern separatist groups, following months of hostilities between rebels and the army.
The junta blamed the “change in posture of certain signatory groups” but also “acts of hostility” by the lead mediator Algeria, government spokesperson Col. Abdoulaye Maiga said in a televised statement, on ending a deal considered essential in maintaining stability in a country rocked by jihadist violence since 2012.
Algeria was the main mediator in efforts to return peace to northern Mali following the agreement signed in its capital in 2015 between the Malian government and predominantly Tuareg armed groups.
It was considered by many analysts to be crucial for stabilizing Mali, a poor and landlocked country in West Africa.
But the deal had effectively begun to unravel last year, when fighting between the separatists and Mali government troops broke out in August after eight years of calm, as both sides scrambled to fill the vacuum left by the withdrawal of United Nations peacekeepers.
Mali’s military leaders, who seized power in a 2020 coup, ordered the departure of the UN’s MINUSMA mission last June, accusing the troops of “fueling community tensions.”
It also broke off relations with former colonial power France, which had been helping to fight jihadist insurgents in the north, and since then has turned to Russia for political and military assistance.
The separatist rebels, grouped under the Coordination of Azawad Movements (CMA), had already accused the military junta in July 2022 of its “abandonment” of the pact.
The Algiers agreement had called for the integration of ex-rebels into the Malian defense forces as well as greater autonomy for the country’s regions.
Maiga said Mali’s government “notes the complete impossibility of the deal... and in consequence announces its end, with immediate effect.”