Zürcher Nachrichten - Separate goals, common enemy for Mali's jihadists and separatists

EUR -
AED 4.202116
AFN 75.517939
ALL 93.768479
AMD 417.197387
ANG 2.048432
AOA 1049.816038
ARS 1682.566179
AUD 1.637757
AWG 2.059579
AZN 1.948586
BAM 1.957246
BBD 2.296077
BDT 140.53386
BGN 1.965191
BHD 0.429923
BIF 3416.054459
BMD 1.144211
BND 1.474403
BOB 7.922324
BRL 5.804006
BSD 1.140057
BTN 109.617281
BWP 15.535345
BYN 3.275163
BYR 22426.528119
BZD 2.292815
CAD 1.608279
CDF 2585.916089
CHF 0.925523
CLF 0.026908
CLP 1059.024564
CNY 7.747164
CNH 7.744241
COP 3731.6713
CRC 519.27923
CUC 1.144211
CUP 30.321581
CVE 110.343655
CZK 24.22517
DJF 203.008257
DKK 7.476627
DOP 66.758754
DZD 152.281804
EGP 58.013421
ERN 17.163159
ETB 184.007301
FJD 2.546155
FKP 0.85507
GBP 0.853038
GEL 2.997764
GGP 0.85507
GHS 13.110689
GIP 0.85507
GMD 84.080513
GNF 9998.432941
GTQ 8.6972
GYD 238.476244
HKD 8.967745
HNL 30.529963
HRK 7.532798
HTG 148.997511
HUF 358.232317
IDR 20673.597451
ILS 3.426223
IMP 0.85507
INR 110.043425
IQD 1493.403686
IRR 1573432.626295
ISK 143.427491
JEP 0.85507
JMD 180.816001
JOD 0.81124
JPY 185.582383
KES 148.003647
KGS 100.06099
KHR 4626.338187
KMF 493.154228
KPW 1029.789634
KRW 1702.070669
KWD 0.35427
KYD 0.950002
KZT 534.725184
LAK 25733.017749
LBP 102086.761874
LKR 383.184957
LRD 206.922871
LSL 18.796491
LTL 3.378557
LVL 0.692122
LYD 7.320346
MAD 10.647469
MDL 20.103858
MGA 4884.567205
MKD 61.644225
MMK 2402.771092
MNT 4103.110628
MOP 9.203101
MRU 45.544256
MUR 53.915074
MVR 17.678467
MWK 1976.743618
MXN 19.91962
MYR 4.658071
MZN 73.119187
NAD 18.796491
NGN 1578.244066
NIO 41.95137
NOK 11.084031
NPR 175.378079
NZD 1.966178
OMR 0.439958
PAB 1.140043
PEN 3.903185
PGK 5.017686
PHP 70.532003
PKR 316.836586
PLN 4.324824
PYG 6914.049338
QAR 4.167671
RON 5.242082
RSD 117.42239
RUB 88.677511
RWF 1685.5678
SAR 4.305282
SBD 9.228105
SCR 15.106744
SDG 687.09581
SEK 11.036489
SGD 1.476043
SHP 0.854269
SLE 27.928029
SLL 23993.532966
SOS 651.490018
SRD 43.050352
STD 23682.849647
STN 24.517155
SVC 9.975372
SYP 126.472
SZL 18.792724
THB 38.362524
TJS 10.522883
TMT 4.004737
TND 3.378909
TOP 2.754985
TRY 53.811751
TTD 7.741721
TWD 36.820127
TZS 3017.798051
UAH 51.237519
UGX 4225.122538
USD 1.144211
UYU 45.86209
UZS 13760.169326
VES 827.372119
VND 30046.398731
VUV 136.983365
WST 3.158218
XAF 656.45075
XAG 0.019603
XAU 0.000284
XCD 3.092287
XCG 2.054618
XDR 0.816396
XOF 656.436396
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.349355
ZAR 18.700861
ZMK 10299.268862
ZMW 20.66309
ZWL 368.435352
  • CMSC

    0.0300

    22.09

    +0.14%

  • JRI

    0.1400

    13.18

    +1.06%

  • BCE

    -0.2500

    21.2

    -1.18%

  • NGG

    0.1300

    83.41

    +0.16%

  • CMSD

    0.0501

    22.33

    +0.22%

  • GSK

    -1.0400

    51.25

    -2.03%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    67.35

    0%

  • BCC

    -0.6300

    74.09

    -0.85%

  • RIO

    3.4400

    93.29

    +3.69%

  • RELX

    -0.7700

    32.65

    -2.36%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2400

    18.63

    -1.29%

  • BP

    0.5700

    41.4

    +1.38%

  • AZN

    -4.9700

    164.5

    -3.02%

  • BTI

    -0.7500

    58.2

    -1.29%

  • VOD

    0.0900

    15.56

    +0.58%

Separate goals, common enemy for Mali's jihadists and separatists
Separate goals, common enemy for Mali's jihadists and separatists / Photo: - - AFP

Separate goals, common enemy for Mali's jihadists and separatists

Unprecedented attacks in Mali by Al-Qaeda-linked jihadists and Tuareg separatists who killed the defence minister and seized a key town are the dramatic result of a new alliance the two groups forged a year ago.

Text size:

The separatists and the jihadists have divergent interests, but are united against a common enemy, experts say: the military junta that has ruled the west African country since 2020 and its Russian paramilitary backers.

Militants from Al-Qaeda's branch in the African Sahel region, the Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims (JNIM), claimed responsibility on Saturday for a series of brazen attacks carried out with the Azawad Liberation Front (FLA), an ethnic Tuareg separatist movement.

Attacking strategic positions held by Mali's ruling junta in several major towns and on the outskirts of the capital, Bamako, the militants took control of the northern town of Kidal and killed Defence Minister Sadio Camara.

JNIM attributed its "victory" to "hard work" and the "active participation of our brothers in the Azawad Liberation Front".

This predominantly Tuareg separatist group, created in 2024, wants independence for the territory of Azawad in northern Mali.

On Saturday, the rebels and jihadists launched a joint assault on Kidal, which they now control again after losing it in November 2023 to the Malian army and allied fighters from the Wagner Group, a Russian mercenary force now largely replaced by Moscow's Africa Corps paramilitary group.

Security sources said the JNIM and FLA also fought together in the northern town of Gao on Saturday. They were pushed back by the Malian army, but remain deployed in the area.

The attacks are reminiscent of a crisis that rocked Mali in 2012, when Tuareg rebels allied with jihadists to capture strategic hubs in the country's vast, remote north.

That was before the alliance disintegrated, the two erstwhile allies turned on each other and the jihadists drove the Tuareg separatists out.

- Different agendas -

Relations between the two were fraught for years, leading to direct clashes in April 2024 on the Mauritanian border.

But they forged a fresh alliance in 2025, according to Wassim Nasr, a researcher at the Soufan Center think tank who specialises in jihadist movements.

The Tuaregs, a historically nomadic people present across Mali, Niger, Algeria, Libya and Burkina Faso, have for decades taken up arms to protest at being marginalised, particularly around Kidal.

The new deal between the FLA and JNIM says the Tuareg rebels will accept the application of sharia law, that judges need to be accepted by both movements before they can be appointed, and that the two will share military expertise.

It also stipulates, Nasr said, that if towns are captured, the urban centres will be administered primarily by the FLA, while rural zones will be the purview of the jihadists.

The decision to cooperate, Nasr said, has been aided by the Islamists' willingness to share their expertise in the use of improvised explosive devices (IEDs) and mortars -- capabilities the FLA had previously struggled to master.

Saturday's coordinated attacks mark "the first time we have truly seen the terms of the agreement put into practice", he said.

A distinctive feature of this new alliance is that it unites two organisations with different agendas, said Jean-Herve Jezequel, the head of the Sahel project at the International Crisis Group.

"JNIM pursues a political-religious agenda, centred on the establishment of sharia law and the rejection of foreign forces, whilst the FLA champions a territorial and autonomist agenda, centred on Azawad," he said.

"This convergence is based above all on the existence of common adversaries, namely the Malian authorities and their Russian partners."

- 'Hasten the junta's fall' -

Nasr said the alliance's strategic goal was not to seize power in Bamako from the ruling junta, but to retake the northern regions.

"They pinned down the army in the centre, dealt a blow to the government in Bamako -- which paralysed the military response -- and achieved their aims in the north," he said of the capture of Kidal.

"They may subsequently try to press their advantage in the centre of the country... to hasten the fall of the junta and/or elicit regime change in Bamako," he said.

Junta leader Assimi Goita has not spoken or been seen publicly since the attacks began, and the head of the intelligence services, Modibo Kone, has been wounded by gunfire.

The groups' strategy "is to weaken and delegitimise the Malian authorities by increasing security pressure in the hope that the regime will collapse, rather than directly seizing power, which appears more complicated in the short term", Jezequel said.

Unlike the alliances of the early 2010s, which quickly fell apart, Jezequel said, the current cooperation deal could last longer, even if its medium-term future might be uncertain.

Nasr said the real test will be how cities such as Kidal are managed -- a phase that has not yet begun.

F.E.Ackermann--NZN