Days after their pardon was announced by the ruling junta of Mali, the erstwhile detained forty-six Ivorian soldiers are back at home in Ivory Coast’s Abidjan.
The freed soldiers landed at the airport in their country’s capital, Abidjan on Saturday after around six months in captivity.
The soldiers were received by the country’s President, Alassane Ouattara who was waiting to greet them at the airport.
“Now that this crisis is behind us, we can resume normal relations with the brother country of Mali,” Ouattara said once they were all on Ivorian soil.
According to Mali at the time of their arrest in July 2022, the soldiers were guilty of “attacking and plotting against the government”, “undermining the external security of the state”, and “possession, carrying and transporting weapons and munitions of war (…) with the aim of disturbing public order through intimidation or terror”, at the end of a two-day trial in Bamako.
Mali under the current junta of Colonel Goita has grown increasingly isolated prompting sanctions from West Africa’s main political and economic bloc ECOWAS. The country has also severed relations with allies like France and is involved in diplomatic loggerheads with others like the US, and Germany, amongst others.