According to a study released on Thursday by Human Rights Watch, following the withdrawal of a United Nations peacekeeping mission late last year, Mali’s armed forces have been abusing civilians with the help of Russian mercenaries.
According to the rights group, since May, Malian military troops and the Russia-backed Wagner Group have torched at least 100 homes in towns and villages in central and northern Mali, executed at least 32 people, including seven in a drone attack, and abducted four more.
Additionally, since June, Human Rights Watch has accused local jihadi organisations of displacing thousands of people and summarily executing at least 47 civilians.
The parties allegedly robbed animals and set fire to thousands of homes, both of which are essential to the region’s nomadic tribes’ existence.
“The Malian army with the Wagner Group and Islamist armed groups have been targeting civilians and their property in violation of the laws of war,” Ilaria Allegrozzi, senior Sahel researcher at Human Rights Watch, said in the report.
For more than ten years, Mali and its neighbours Burkina Faso and Niger have been fighting an insurgency headed by jihadi organisations, some of which are affiliated with al-Qaida and the Islamic State group.
The ruling juntas in all three countries have resorted to Russian mercenary groups for security support after expelling French forces in the wake of military takeovers in recent years. Since an army takeover in late 2021, Wagner has been in Mali, replacing UN peacekeeping and French troops to aid in the fight against the Islamists.
The mercenary outfit has also been charged with aiding in the execution of drone strikes and raids that have resulted in the deaths of people.
Following a request by the government, which claimed the force was insufficient to combat the insurgency, the UN terminated MINUSMA, its ten-year peacekeeping operation in Mali, in December of last year.
“Since MINUSMA left Mali a year ago, it has been complicated to get comprehensive information on abuses, and we are deeply concerned that the situation is even worse than reported,” Allegrozzi said.