DNYUZ
Maliancolonel and interim Prime Minister Abdoulaye Maiga lashed out at France on Saturday in comments made in a speech to the UN General Assembly.
Maiga said that Bamako had been “stabbed in the back” by France’s military withdrawal early this year. Paris maintained a military presence in the country between 2013 and 2022 in a bid to assist Mali in its fight with an Islamist insurgency.
Last month, Mali accused France of arming Islamist militants without providing evidence.
Maiga slams ‘French junta’
Maiga condemned Paris for what he called a “unilateral decision” to transfer remaining forces to neighboring Niger, which is also grappling with Islamist militants, as is the case of much of the Sahel region that divides Northern and Sub-Saharan Africa.
France aborted the mission amid rapidly deteriorating ties with Mali’s military government — which took power in 2020 and does not plan to hold elections until 2024, based on its current timetable — and as Mali’s military called in Russian mercenary support.
Mali’s prime minister tried to turn the tables, however, repeatedly referring to France’s government as “the French junta.”
Maiga, an army colonel, was appointed interim PM by Assimi Goita, who took power in a military takeover in 2020, and then in another coup in 2021.
“The French junta has damaged universal values and betrayed its long tradition of humanistic thought,” Mali’s prime minister claimed, arguing that Paris had acted “in service of obscurantism” and engaged in “neo-colonial, condescending, paternalistic and revanchist” politics.
“Move on from the colonial past and hear the anger, the frustration, the rejection that is coming up from the African cities and countryside, and understand that this movement is inexorable,” Maiga said, addressing France.
The territory that now encompasses Mali was part of the colony of French West Africa until its independence in 1960.
“Your intimidations and subversive actions have only swelled the ranks of Africans concerned with preserving their dignity,” he said.
Maiga also praised the “exemplary and fruitful cooperation between Mali and Russia.” Western states have risen concerns around the presence in Mali of Russian Wagner Group mercenaries, who have been accused of human rights violations…