Jihadists and their separatist ​Tuareg-led allies have hit northern Mali, where government troops and Russian paramilitary forces are based, with fresh coordinated attacks – striking several towns and a prison, according to the army, residents and security sources.

Issued on: 04/07/2026 - 11:34

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Jihadists with the al-Qaeda linked JNIM and members of the Azawad Liberation Front (FLA) launched coordinated assaults at around 5:00 am on Saturday. Attacks were reported in Gao, Anefis, Aguelhok and Sevare, as well as a prison in Kenieroba. The latest fighting came more than two months after the same rebel groups staged attacks against the military-led government, hitting the airport in the capital ​Bamako, killing the defence minister ‌and seizing a string of army bases in the north. Mohamed Elmaouloud Ramadane, a spokesperson for the FLA – an ethnic Tuareg separatist movement – told France's AFP that "several positions have fallen, but fighting [was] still underway inside the city" of Anefis in the northeastern Kidal region early Saturday morning. A resident there contacted by AFP said that "armed groups are in the town, but the army is still putting up resistance. The camp [there] has not yet fallen". Mali's war on civilians deepens as alliances shift, HRW says Rebels gaining ground Government and Russian troops deployed in Anefis ​in the wake of the April attacks ​in which the FLA and the ​regional al Qaeda affiliate seized control of Kidal town in a major blow to the ruling military junta. In the central ​city of Gao, a local official said there had been gunfire and rockets launched at a military camp since before dawn on Saturday. It was ⁠not immediately clear which fighters were responsible. The northern towns of Anefis and Aguelhok are the last remaining locations where Mali's army maintains a presence in the Kidal region, following the massive attacks of April 25 and 26. In the central town of Sevare, "explosions rang out... around 5:00 am, though their origin is not yet known. Shortly eafter, several aircraft were spotted flying over the area", a security source told AFP. The major Kenieroba prison complex, where jihadists, among others, are held, located a few dozen kilometres from the capital, Bamako, was also under attack. "We are under our beds, the gunfire continues," a prisoner told AFP. The FLA and JNIM have allied against Mali’s army and its Russian partners from Africa Corps, a Kremlin-controlled Russian paramilitary force that remained in Mali after the Wagner Group announced its withdrawal from the country in June 2025. (with newswires)