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May 02, 2026
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Mali Investigates Soldiers Suspected of Involvement in Military Base Attacks

AI Summary
Malian authorities are investigating soldiers suspected of involvement in simultaneous attacks on army bases across the country, claimed by an al-Qaeda affiliate and separatists. Five suspects have been identified, including three active-duty soldiers, one retired person, and a soldier who was killed in fighting.

The Investigation into Military Base Attacks

Malian authorities say they are investigating soldiers suspected of involvement in a wave of simultaneous attacks on army bases across the country last week, claimed by an al-Qaeda affiliate and separatists.

The Suspects and Arrests

A prosecutor at a military tribunal near the capital, Bamako, said in a statement on Friday that five suspects had been identified, including three active-duty soldiers, one retired person and a soldier who was killed in fighting near a Bamako army base.

  • Five suspects identified
  • Three active-duty soldiers
  • One retired person
  • One soldier who was killed in fighting

“The first arrests have been successfully carried out, and all other perpetrators, co-perpetrators, and accomplices are actively being sought,” the statement said.

The Impact of the Attacks

The coordinated assault on the morning of April 25 struck at the heart of the West African country’s ⁠military government, which took power after coups in 2020 and 2021.

The defence minister was killed and Russian forces backing the government were forced out of the northern town of Kidal, which al-Qaeda-linked Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM) and Tuareg separatists of the Liberation Front for Azawad (FLA) now control.

The Future Outlook

JNIM has called on Malians to rise up against the government and transition to Islamic law. The group has also ‌pledged to besiege Bamako, and on Friday security sources told the Reuters news agency it had set up checkpoints around the city of four million.

Military leader Assimi Goita said in ‌a ‌televised address on Tuesday that the situation was under control and promised to “neutralise” the armed groups behind the attacks.