Maghreb Edition

Sahel: More soldiers killed in landmine blast in Mopti, MaliF

Posted On 1 March 2019

Number of times this article was read : 312

March 1, 2019 – Nine soldiers in the five-nation G5 Sahel anti-jihadist force were killed in central Mali on Friday when their vehicle hit an improvised explosive device, the Malian army said. The incident happened at Boulkessy, in the Mopti region, it said on its internet site. “Nine FAMa soldiers died,” it said, using the acronym for the Malian armed forces. The attack also left a number of wounded “who require urgent treatment,” a military official told AFP.

The troops were deployed with the G5 Sahel, a force designed to pool the military strengths of Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania and Niger to fight jihadism and lawlessness in the region. Mali has been struggling to return to stability after Al-Qaeda-linked extremists took control of the north in early 2012, prompting a military intervention by France.  Although they were routed in the French operation in 2013, large stretches of the landlocked state remain out of government control. Most of the violence is centered in Mali’s central and southern regions but it has also spread across its borders, affecting neighbouring Burkina Faso and Niger.

The latest attacks occurred close to a location where 17 Malian civilians were killed on Tuesday when a booby-trapped corpse blew up. The body was that of a man who had gone to find food for his cattle and never returned. His parents went looking for him, found the corpse and unwittingly triggered the device.
“Booby-trapping a corpse to try to inflict additional casualties is a foul act and a grave crime. Those behind such an outrage should be put on trial and sentenced,” Mahamat Saleh Annadif, head of the UN peacekeeping force in Mali, MINUSMA, said on Thursday.

On February 14, jihadists in neighbouring Burkina Faso used an identical method, rigging a corpse dressed in military fatigues with explosives. The blast killed two police officers and an army doctor. Created in 2015, the French-backed G5 Sahel has currently mustered 4,000 out of a proposed 5,000-man force. The scheme, which brings together five of the world’s poorest and most fragile countries, has run into problems of financing, poor equipment and lack of training.

Last June, its then headquarters, in the central Malian town of Sevare, came under suicide attack, causing three deaths, two of them Malian soldiers. Its commanding officer, Malian General Didier Dacko, was replaced by a Mauritanian, Hanena Ould Sidi, who in September ordered the HQ be moved to Bamako, Mali’s capital.

By AFP

Subscribe to Urgent Notifications and Newsletter

Most Recent Stories from the Region

North African Countries Among World’s Cheapest for Gasoline, Lead Global Rankings$

North African countries currently rank among the cheapest places in the world to buy gasoline, according to international price data published in late April 2026. The global average pump price for gasoline stood at around $1.49 per liter, while several North African producers were charging less than half that level. Libya, Algeria and Egypt all sit among the most affordable markets globally — though two non-African countries, Venezuela and Iran, rank between Libya and the rest of the African group in the worldwide table.

Libya: A drifting Russian gas tanker threatens the Mediterranean$

Since March 3, 2026, the Russian LNG tanker Arctic Metagaz, 277 meters long, has been drifting off the Libyan coast. Loaded with 62,000 tons of liquefied natural gas (LNG), 900 tons of diesel, and 450 tons of heavy fuel oil, it poses the risk of an environmental disaster for the Mediterranean basin. Amid repeated failures to tow the vessel, accusations of Ukrainian sabotage, and the powerlessness of Libyan authorities, the Mediterranean is on high alert.

Written by The North Africa Journal

The North Africa Journal is a leading English-language publication focused on North Africa. The Journal covers primarily the Maghreb region and expands its general coverage to the Sahel, Egypt, and beyond, when events in those regions affect the broader North Africa geography. The Journal does not have any affiliation with any institution and has been independent since its founding in 1996. Our position is to always bring our best analysis of events affecting the region, and remain as neutral as humanly possible. Our coverage is not limited to one single topic, but ranges from economic and political affairs, to security, defense, social and environmental issues. We rely on our full staff analysts and editors to bring you best-in-class analysis. We also work with sister company MEA Risk LLC, to leverage the presence on the ground of a solid network of contributors and experts. Information on MEA Risk can be found at www.MEA-Risk.com.