Malian defense chief is killed as jihadis and rebels seize towns and
military bases
[April 27, 2026]
By WILSON MCMAKIN
DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — Mali 's defense minister was killed in a sweeping
attack by jihadis and rebels who seized several towns and military
bases, authorities said Sunday, the latest violence in the junta-run
country that has long battled militants linked to al-Qaida and the
Islamic State group as well as a separatist rebellion in the north.
The Malian government confirmed the death of the defense chief, Gen.
Sadio Camara, in a post on the defense ministry's Facebook page, and
expressed its condolences to his family. State-run television also
broadcast the announcement of his death by spokesman Gen. Issa Ousmane
Coulibaly.
Mali was struck on Saturday by one of the biggest coordinated attacks on
its army in the capital, Bamako, and several other cities and towns in
an assault that also challenged Mali’s security partner, Russia, which
has forces on the ground in the West African country.
The government said Sunday the attacks appear to be over, but several
questions remain, including who was in control of a key northern city
that the separatists claim to have taken.
The government has not provided a death toll from Saturday and
previously said only that at least 16 people were wounded in what it
denounced as terror attacks.
The separatists have been fighting for years to create an independent
state in northern Mali, while al-Qaida and IS-aligned militants have
been fighting the government for over a decade.
According to the government statement, Camara's residence was targeted
by a suicide car bomber and other attackers on Saturday.

“He engaged in an exchange of fire with the assailants, some of whom he
managed to neutralize,” it said. "During intense clashes, he was wounded
and then transported to the hospital, where he unfortunately succumbed
to his injuries."
Separatists claim control of the northern town of Kidal
A spokesperson for the separatist Tuareg-led Azawad Liberation Front, or
FLA, said the Russian Africa Corps troops and the Malian military
withdrew from the city of Kidal following the attack on Saturday, after
an agreement was reached for their peaceful exit.
“Kidal is declared free,” said FLA spokesperson Mohamed El Maouloud
Ramadan.
In a statement on state TV late Sunday night, Gen. Oumar Diarra, head of
the armed forces, confirmed that the Malian army had left the city and
that its forces were repositioning in Anefis, a city about 100
kilometers (62 miles) south of Kidal.
The separatists have been fighting for years to create an independent
state in northern Mali.
Kidal had long served as a stronghold of the rebellion before being
taken by Malian government forces and Russian mercenaries in 2023. Its
capture marked a significant symbolic victory for the junta and its
Russian allies.
Militants unite with separatists to coordinate attacks
Saturday's wave of attacks was the first time the separatists joined
forces with the al-Qaida-linked group JNIM, which said it was also part
of the attack on Kidal and had also targeted a town outside of the
capital of Bamako and three other cities on Saturday.
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Mali's Defense Minister Sadio Camara enters a hall for a talk in
Moscow, Russia, on Feb. 28, 2024. (Maxim Shipenkov/Pool Photo via
AP, File)

The FLA spokesperson confirmed the coordinated push.
“This operation is being carried out in partnership with the JNIM,
which is also committed to defending the people against the military
regime in Bamako,” Ramadan said.
The separatists called on Russia to “reconsider its support for the
military junta" in Mali, saying its "actions have contributed to the
suffering of the civilian population.”
Wassim Nasr, a specialist for the region and senior research fellow
at the Soufan Center security think tank, said this “coordination,
conducting attacks all over the country at the same time,” the
united push by the two groups and the call for the Russian military
to leave was a first.
It extended beyond the military, he said, to the political level
because both groups “acknowledged that they worked together.”
Following the attacks, a three-day overnight curfew, from 9 p.m. to
6 a.m., was also announced for the Bamako district.
Mali's government spokesperson, Coulibaly, said civilian and
military personnel were among the 16 wounded and that several
militants were killed. He did not provide a death toll.
A threat to the wider region
The Economic Community of West African States condemned Saturday's
attacks in Mali and called on “all states, security forces, regional
mechanisms and populations of West Africa to unite and mobilize in a
coordinated effort to combat this scourge.”
Following military coups, the juntas in Mali, Niger, and Burkina
Faso turned from Western allies to Russia for help in combating
Islamic militants.
But the security situation in the region has worsened in recent
times, with a record number of attacks by militants. Government
forces have also been accused of killing civilians they suspect of
collaborating with militants.
In 2024, an al-Qaida-linked group claimed an attack on Bamako’s
airport and a military training camp in the country's capital,
killing scores of people.

Ulf Laessing, from the Konrad Adenauer Foundation, said that the
separatists and JNIM are unlikely to take control of Bamako in the
near term due to opposition from the local population.
Still, the attacks undermined the Malian junta's Russian partners.
“The attacks are a major blow to Russia as the mercenaries had no
intelligence about the attacks and were unable to protect major
cities,” Laessing said.
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