Algeria: Pres Tebboune offers to mediate between Malian authorities and rebel Tuareg forces

Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune said he was ready to help mediate between Malian authorities and rebel forces in the country’s north – but only if Mali makes an official request for intervention.  

ALGIERS, July 22 (NNN-AFRICANEWS) — Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune says he is ready to help mediate between Malian authorities and rebel forces in the country’s north – but only if Mali makes an official request for intervention.  

The regime in Bamako has been battling the CMA coalition of Tuareg independentists and Arab nationalists since 2023. Mali’s military junta pulled out of an Algerian-negotiated peace deal last year after the CMA clashed with government forces and Russian Africa Corps mercenaries, formerly known as Wagner.  

During his address to the national press, President Tebboune said his country would not accept mercenaries on the 1,400 km border with Mali, despite his country’s strong ties with Russia. 

Bamako has accused Algiers, which has its own Tuareg population, of harboring terrorists who cross the border to launch attacks in Mali.  

In recent months, the two north African neighbors have swapped accusations of cross-border drone strikes.  

The withdrawal of the UN stabilization mission MINUSMA from Mali in 2023 has created a power vacuum in the north that President Goita’s junta has sought to fill with Russian mercenaries. — NNN-AFRICANEWS

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