Algeria on Tuesday warned of the consequences of the emerging crisis between Mali and the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), while offering its assistance to end the tension.
“After the grave risks of sanctions imposed by ECOWAS on Mali and the countermeasures announced by the transitional government in Bamako, Algeria urges all parties to stick to self-restraint and return to dialogue to spare the region a spiral of tensions and exacerbation of the crisis,” said the Algerian presidency in a statement.
The statement affirmed Algeria’s readiness to “actively accompany Mali and the ECOWAS on the path of mutual understanding with a vision of solidarity that safeguards the higher interests of the brotherly Malian people.”
The ECOWAS announced on Monday the closure of the borders with Mali, suspending trade with Mali, freezing Mali’s assets in the Central Bank of West African States, and recalling member states’ ambassadors from Mali. It said the cancellation of these sanctions is premised on “an acceptable timetable for holding elections” announced by the transitional government in Mali, which has scheduled presidential elections in December 2026. The Algerian presidency has warned of the political, security and economic consequences that may result from a long-term transfer of power in Mali, with reference to the transitional authorities that have ruled the country since May 2021 after ousting interim president Bah N’Daw and prime minister Moctar Ouane.
After the ousting of Bah N’Daw in May 2021, Algeria has voiced its rejection for any change of government by force in Mali.
Police officers and people stand at the bomb explosion site in Mogadishu, Somalia on November 25, 2021. Five people were killed and over a dozen injured in a car bombing near a school in Somalia’s capital Mogadishu on November 25, 2021, a security official said, in the latest attack to hit the troubled country. Photo: AFP