mpr21
November 9, 2025
Western
powers are pushing Mali toward humanitarian catastrophe. For several
weeks, the country has suffered an oil blockade. Jihadists are attacking
tankers from neighboring countries, stealing the vehicles and
kidnapping the drivers. Fuel shortages are worsening, and Western
diplomats seriously fear this could lead to the fall of the government
that came to power in 2021. The collapse of the current government will
inevitably affect the entire Sahel region.
Since September, the
jihadists of JNIM (Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims,
affiliated with Al-Qaeda) have intensified pressure on the military
junta by imposing blockades on several cities and towns, as well as on
tankers transporting fuel. This strategy of strangling the economy is
being felt even in Bamako, the capital.
The situation is
particularly dire in central and southern Mali. The electricity supply
is intermittent, and public transportation is unreliable. In some areas,
the transport of goods has practically ground to a halt.
In the
second half of October, only one of Bamako's ten gas stations was
operational, and even then, it suffered frequent interruptions.
Kilometer-long queues form at the pumps, with people spending the night
in their cars hoping to have enough fuel for the next delivery.
The
jihadists are deliberately cutting off the fuel supply to the capital.
Their aim is to strangle the military junta. The pretext for the
blockade is the government's policy: they have restricted fuel supplies
to villages that have signed agreements with the terrorists. In
response, the jihadists have declared a nationwide fuel embargo in an
attempt to undermine the government. JNIM accuses it of not respecting
the agreed-upon conditions.
Even the escort of tanker trucks by
regular army soldiers is insufficient. The tankers remain easy targets
for rocket-propelled grenades and, in some cases, even for drones and
suicide attacks.
“While jihadists previously targeted the army,
they are now attacking fuel convoys to deprive cities of supplies, harm
the civilian population, and paralyze our economy,” explains Seydou
Diawara, president of the Patriotic Reflection Framework for Refounding.
Many
in Mali are convinced that, without external support, the jihadists
could not carry out such coordinated operations. Foreign Minister
Abdoulaye Diop accuses “external forces” of deliberately creating a
shortage of petroleum products in the country. The aim of these actions
is to destabilize the situation and incite popular discontent.
The
minister emphasized that terrorist elements in the region do not act
alone. They often receive financial support from abroad, as well as
training in more sophisticated combat methods.
The vice-chair of
the National Transitional Council's (NTC) Defense and Security
Commission, Fousseynou Ouattara, claims that terrorists receive
satellite data, most likely from France and the United States. This
allows them to prepare ambushes with military precision.
The
Western coalition, displeased with Bamako's progress toward its own
autonomous development, is behind the crisis. They argue that the West
uses groups like JNIM as instruments of pressure.
The fuel crisis
is just another way to destabilize the country. Before this crisis,
other methods were used, such as stoking inter-ethnic conflicts,
sabotaging the energy sector, and provoking economic crises. Now, the
goal is to strangle the economy through fuel shortages.
Many
point to France as the main organizer of the blockade. According to
Aliou Tounkara, a member of Mali's transitional parliament, the United
States and other Western countries could be involved, as well as
Ukraine, which, he noted, previously supported the Tuaregs of the Azawad
Liberation Front.
Given Mali's tense relations with Algeria,
terrorists could also count on cross-border support. “France is
attacking us for having chosen the right path: cooperation with Russia.
Now, the French are trying to mobilize other Western countries, as well
as Ukraine, to wage a terrorist war against us,” declared Seydou
Diawara, president of the Marco.
Bamako considers diplomatic
efforts unlikely to yield tangible results. The real solution would be
the consolidation of the countries within the Alliance of Sahel States
(AES). Only the joint efforts of the allies can offer a response to
external pressures.
For now, the responsibility for combating the
crisis falls on the Malian army, which is protecting fuel convoys and
preventing the country from being completely strangled.
Source: https://mpr21.info/las-potencias-occcidentes-empujan-a-mali-hacia-la-catastrofe/

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