Mali and Algeria have expressed a plan to renew a peace deal signed in 2015 between them known as the Algiers Accords.
The countries, in a joint statement, made the position known amidst activities of rebels in northern Mali which has become more fragile lately, and raises fears of renewed violence.
Algerian Foreign Minister, Ahmed Attaf, after a discussion with junta leader Colonel Assimi Goita, said the countries “have carried out a very precise, very rigorous examination of what is needed to ensure the effective and productive relaunch, via a political process protected from short-term turbulence.”
Meanwhile, an official of one of the rebel groups, Mohamed Almou of the Coordination of Azawad Movements (CMA), told journalists they were weary about the reenactment of the pact.
“They have to stop sliding further into denial (and) acknowledge the situation is spiralling out of control,” Almou remarked.
The 1,359 km (844 m) long border between Algeria and Mali stretches from the tripoint with Mauritania in the northwest to the tripoint with Niger in the southeast and has become an access point to terrorist engagement since the beginning of the Malian war in 2012.
The accord (PDF) was birthed out of the need for “governance which recognises the geo-historical and socio-cultural specificities of the North, whose history has been marked by challenges that have deeply affected the living conditions of its populations and rejected the use of violence as a means of political expression, and the use of dialogue and consultation to resolve differences”
It also united the Tuareg rebels and the government and provided greater local autonomy as well as the opportunity to incorporate fighters into a state-run “reconstituted” army that would operate in the area.
However, the pact has only been partially put into practice as armed groups withdrew in December as efforts were made to “organize” a crisis meeting with the Malian administration “on neutral ground” failed to materialize.
Since the beginning of the unrest in Mali, several insurgent groups have been pushing a campaign against the Malian government for independence or greater autonomy for northern Mali, which they called Azawad.