The UN has made the announcement that it will end its peacekeeping operation in Mali, a country in West Africa. Relations between the Bamako government and the UN have deteriorated over the past year. According to Malian officials, the UN’s presence only serves to exacerbate tensions between the various communities.
The Multidimensional Integrated Stabilisation Mission in Mali (MINUSMA) will be terminated, the Security Council members said in a Friday article from the UN. The governing military junta will take over all security duties.
The gradual pullout, which started on Saturday, is anticipated to be finished by January 1st, 2024.
The remaining forces will be permitted, according to the UN, to “respond with force to imminent threats of violence to civilians” and to aid in the distribution of humanitarian aid until September 30.
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The 2015 Agreement on Peace and Reconciliation in Mali’s parties were urged by UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres “to continue honouring the ceasefire as MINUSMA withdraws.”
The UN will still work with Mali’s interim administration once the peacekeepers depart, the official emphasised.
The Security Council’s permanent member, Russia, promised to support Bamako as well, including on a bilateral basis.
Authorities in Mali demanded last month that the UN cease its peacekeeping operation “without delay.” Abdoulaye Diop, the nation’s foreign minister, alleged in a speech to the UN Security Council that “MINUSMA seems to have become a part of the problem in fueling inter-community tensions.”
Over the past 12 months, tensions between the UN and Mali’s temporary military administration have increased. In July of last year, Bamako put an end to MINUSMA’s military rotations shortly after detaining 49 Cote d’Ivoire soldiers they dubbed “mercenaries.” The Malian government expelled MINUSMA spokesman Olivier Salgado a month later.
Mali has experienced political unrest for several years, with two distinct coups in 2020 and 2021, as well as a persistent Islamist insurgency in the rural north of the country. The UN mission was established in response to the Tuareg uprising in 2012, and it eventually grew to include more than 15,000 international troops. 303 peacekeepers have died in the line of duty since then.