Despite the total withdrawal of French troops in Mali, France has revealed that some 3,000 French troops are still deployed in the Sahel.
French general staff made the revelation on Wednesday, two days after the total withdrawal from Mali.
Mali on Wednesday asked the United Nations Security Council for an emergency meeting to stop what it describes as “acts of aggression” by France.
The general staff told journalists that “as part of the re-articulation of Operation Barkhane out of Mali, about 3,000 soldiers will remain engaged in the Sahel and will carry out their missions from existing holdings in Niger and Chad, alongside our African partners: military combat partnership, operational military partnership, logistical operations.”
Spokesman for the General Staff, Colonel Pierre Gaudillière, said “the end of the presence of French soldiers in Operation Barkhane in Mali does not mean the end of Operation Barkhane. The transformation of Operation Barkhane is much more profound than this departure from Mali,”
“It is part of a new partnership approach with African countries that request it,” he continued, taking the example of Niger, where the French and Nigerien armies “conduct joint patrols and joint training.
Mali under Colonel Goita has been at diplomatic loggerheads with France. It started by breaking defense alliance with the French, the junta also quit the anti-jihadist force, G-5 force but has enjoyed good relationship with Russia.
The French presidency said Monday, “France remains committed to the Sahel,” as well as “in the Gulf of Guinea and (in) the Lake Chad region,” as jihadists affiliated with al-Qaida and Islamic State groups, long contained in the Sahel, are now nibbling away at the ground further south.
France has had its relationship with some African countries turn sour lately with recent anti-French protests in some parts of the continent. The government in Gabon was forced to stop planned protest in May. There were also pockets of “anti-French” protests in South Africa in the month.