Al Qaeda-linked insurgents call on Malians to rise up, establish Sharia law


FILE PHOTO: Malian soldiers stand near a truck during a patrol following the attack on Mali's main military base Kati, outside the capital Bamako, in Kati, Mali, April 27, 2026. Picture taken with a mobile phone. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo

DAKAR, May 1 (Reuters) - ⁠Al Qaeda-linked insurgents have called on Malians to rise up against ⁠the military-led government and transition to Sharia law in a rare ‌French-language statement issued days after carrying out unprecedented attacks across the country.

Jama'at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM) launched assaults on April 25 in coordination with the Tuareg-dominated rebel group the Azawad Liberation Front (FLA), hitting ​bases throughout the landlocked African country and near the ⁠capital Bamako, seizing the town ⁠of Kidal and killing the defence minister.

"We call upon all sincere patriots, without ⁠exception, ‌to rise up and unite," the group said in a statement issued late on Thursday and confirmed by the U.S.-based SITE Intelligence Group.

JNIM, ⁠which usually issues written statements in Arabic, wrote in French, ​the official language ‌in Mali for government and business.

It called for political parties, soldiers, religious ⁠authorities, traditional leaders ​and "all segments of Malian society" to end the "dictatorship" of the government, which it described as a "terrorist junta."

Mali's military leaders seized power in back-to-back coups in 2020 and 2021.

JNIM ⁠has over the past year been on a ​drive for legitimacy through coercion and strategic engagement with local populations, and has sought to characterise the government as illegitimate.

"Overthrowing the junta is not enough. We must, together, ⁠prevent any chaotic vacuum that would plunge our nation into total collapse," the statement said.

It called for a "peaceful, responsible, and inclusive transition" and for the establishment of Sharia law.

JNIM, which threatened a total blockade on Bamako following the attacks, ​has established checkpoints on several major arteries leading to ⁠the city including from the north and south, three sources told Reuters on Friday.

Mali's ​military leader Assimi Goita said in a televised ‌address on Tuesday that the situation was ​under control, and vowed to "neutralise" the insurgent groups behind the attacks.

(Reporting by Portia Crowe; Additional reporting by David Lewis; Editing by Sharon Singleton)

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