The Malian army chief, General Oumar Diarra has concluded a three-day visit to Rwanda for talks to strengthen bilateral defense cooperation.
The Chief of the General Staff of the Malian Armed forces was received by his counterpart Gen Jean Bosco Kazura at the Rwanda Defense Forces Headquarters in Kigali.
According to a statement by the Rwanda Ministry of Defence, bilateral defense collaboration was on the agenda for the discussion between the two men. The talk aimed to tackle different aspects of “cooperation in human resource development, military training, and welfare”
Mali’s army chief, who also met with President Paul Kagame and the minister of Defence said the purpose of his trip was “to exchange experience and expertise on capacity building” of both the Rwanda Defence Force and Malian Armed Forces.
The Mali War is an ongoing armed conflict that started in January 2012 between the northern and southern parts of Mali in Africa. According to a UN report, jihadists, armed militias and the armed forces in Mali killed close to 600 civilians in 2021.
There have been efforts outside Bamako to end the war. France, Mali’s former colonial ruler, has been drawn deeply into the conflict there. The Malian government requested help from Paris in 2013, and a mission the French military initially expected to only last a few weeks has now become what some analysts call France’s “forever war”
Mali’s ruling military junta announced that the country would break off from its defence relations with France citing “flagrant violations” of its national sovereignty.
Rwanda, on its part, has sent about 1,000 soldiers to back regional efforts to stop an Islamist insurrection in the province of Cabo Delgado.