26 Sep 2021

Russia says Mali seeking private military company for help fighting insurgency

4:27 pm on 26 September 2021

Mali has asked a private Russian military company to help it fight against insurgents, Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov said on Saturday at the United Nations.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

Russian Photo: AFP PHOTO / POOL / Alexander Zemlianichenko

Mali's year-old military junta is close to a deal to recruit the Russian private military contractors the Wagner Group, sources have told Reuters, triggering opposition from France, which has said it was "incompatible" with a continued French presence in the West African state.

"They are combating terrorism, incidentally, and they have turned to a private military company from Russia in connection with the fact that, as I understand, France wants to significantly draw down its military component which was present there," Lavrov said of Mali's junta during a news conference.

The French defence ministry declined to comment. Paris has started reshaping its 5000-strong Barkhane mission to include more European partners and earlier this month began redeploying from bases in northern Mali.

Mali's military junta has said it will oversee a transition to democracy leading to elections in February 2022.

Mali's Prime Minister Choguel Maiga told the UN General Assembly today that his country felt abandoned by the French move and signalled they were seeking other military help "to fill the gap, which will certainly result from the withdrawal of Barkhane in the north of the country".

"The new situation resulting from the end of Operation Barkhane puts Mali before a fait accompli - abandoning us, mid-flight to a certain extent - and it leads us to explore pathways and means to better ensure our security autonomously, or with other partners," he said.

European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said on Saturday that he told Lavrov and his counterpart from Mali this week in New York that the potential deployment of the Wagner Group would be a "red line" for the European Union, "and it would have immediate consequences on our cooperation."

EU foreign ministers discussed the issue last week during a closed-door meeting on the sidelines of the annual gathering of world leaders for the UN General Assembly in New York.

Lavrov said the Russian government had nothing to do with any deal between the private military company and Mali.