The decision of Mali to withdraw from a West African anti-jihadist force and regional grouping known as the G5 Sahel is “regrettable”.
The G5 Sahel which includes Mauritania, Chad, Burkina Faso and Niger was launched in 2014, with an anti-Insurgency force added in 2017 that is now 5,000 strong.
The Executive secretary, Eric Tiare said the group had until now “fought the good fight on two fronts”, combatting terrorism and helping foster socioeconomic development.
The anti-Insurgency force “had some successes” in its joint operations, Tiare said, calling on the UN to do more in terms of its support for the G5 Sahel.
Despite repeated requests from UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and notably France, the United States has consistently blocked any UN financial or other backing to the group, instead preferring bilateral aid.
In an interview with French media, Niger’s President Mohamed Bazoum said the group was effectively defunct after Mali’s retreat, which came in protest after it was not allowed to assume the group’s rotating presidency.
“The G5 Sahel is dead. Since the second coup in Mali (in May 2021), Bamako has been burying its head in the sand, isolating itself within Africa and depriving us of developing a concerted and coordinated anti-terror strategy,” he said on Wednesday.
France’s envoy to the United Nations, Nicolas de Riviere, lamented Mali’s withdrawal from the force, as did other Security Council members.
“The G5 has been created by the G5 themselves, so it’s up to them to decide what they want to do with it,” he told journalists before the Council’s session.
It did not name that country, but appeared to be taking aim at France.
Mali has been since January 9 the target of a series of economic and diplomatic sanctions from West African states to punish the junta’s bid to stay in power for several more years, following coups in August 2020 and May 2021.
One of the poorest and most volatile countries in the world, Mali is battling a decade-old jihadist revolt, which began with a regional insurrection and then spread to Niger and Burkina Faso.
Thousands of civilians and soldiers have died, and hundreds of thousands have fled their homes, despite the presence of French, European and African forces, as well as UN peacekeepers.