Dozens dead in twin attacks on Mali army bases

French soldiers of the Barkhane force patrol the streets of Timbuktu, northern Mali. (AFP)
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Updated 02 June 2025
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Dozens dead in twin attacks on Mali army bases

  • Timbuktu attacked with shells fired at the city's airport

BAMAKO: Twin attacks on two Malian army base in the northern city of Timbuktu and in the center of the country left dozens of soldiers dead, as well as at least a dozen assailants, security sources and local officials said Monday.
Timbuktu came under attack and shells were also fired at the airport where heavy gunfire was heard, the army, local officials and residents said.
The army’s general staff said in a statement it had “thwarted an attempt by terrorist fighters to infiltrate the Timbuktu camp” at around 10:00 am (local and GMT) with 13 attackers “neutralized,” with no mention of other victims.
But the military was mourning the loss of at least 30 soldiers after reports emerged late Monday of an attack Sunday, likewise blamed on jihadists, at the Boulkessi army base in central Mali, near the border with Burkina Faso.
Security sources and a local official said they believed the death toll from that attack would likely rise.
“Our units on the ground report the death of 30 people on our side ... Our men fought to the end but did not receive the necessary support,” a security source in Bamako told AFP after the attack on what is one of the main military camps in the center of the violence-plagued country.
The source added other soldiers remained missing.
“The toll is at least 60 soldiers killed,” one local elected official told AFP on condition of anonymity.
A second security source told AFP there were “about 60 victims on the side of Malian forces,” although that tally included “the dead, the missing and the soldiers taken hostage.”
In a statement late Sunday, the army had indicated that troops had “responded vigorously” to the Boulkessi attack before withdrawing.

The statement went on to declare that “many men fought, some until their last breath” to defend their country and that ensuing military operations “have destroyed several terrorists grouped in places of retreat.”
Junta-ruled Mali has since 2012 faced attacks from groups linked to Al-Qaeda and the Daesh group as well as separatist movements and criminal gangs.
The army’s general staff said Monday regarding the Timbuktu attack that it had thwarted an attempt by terrorist fighters to infiltrate the camp in the fabled desert city.
Later in the day, a security source said that operations in the camp were “already over” and that the attackers were “everywhere in the city.”
“They did not raid the airport because the Russians are there. But they launched shells. It’s hot everywhere,” the source added.
A local official said the “terrorists” arrived in Timbuktu “with a vehicle packed with explosives.”
“The vehicle exploded near the (military) camp,” the official said.
UN staff were instructed in a message “to take shelter.”
A local journalist speaking by telephone said “the city is under fire.”
The ancient city of Timbuktu, once known as the “city of 333 saints” for the Muslim holy men buried there, was subject to major destruction while under the control of jihadists for several months in 2012.
The jihadists who swept into the city considered the shrines idolatrous and destroyed them with pickaxes and bulldozers.
The ancient city was peacefully retaken in late January 2013 with the support of French military forces under Operation Serval, deployed to halt the jihadists’ advance in Mali.
Since seizing power in coups in 2020 and 2021, Mali’s military rulers have broken the country’s traditional ties with its former colonial power France and moved closer to Russia.
Jihadist groups and the Malian army and its allies from the Russian paramilitary group Wagner are regularly accused of committing abuses against civilians.
 


Finland warns end of Ukraine war could bring more Russian spying

Updated 8 sec ago
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Finland warns end of Ukraine war could bring more Russian spying

  • SUPO said that while the Ukraine conflict would probably continue for the “foreseeable future,” its end would free up Russian resources
  • “Russian intelligence capacity in Europe has suffered due to the war”

HELSINKI: Finland’s intelligence agency warned Tuesday that Russian spies could boost their efforts to target and destabilize the new NATO member once the Ukraine war ends.
The Finnish Security and Intelligence Service (SUPO) said that while the Ukraine conflict, triggered by Moscow’s full-scale invasion in 2022, would probably continue for the “forseeable future,” its end would free up Russian resources.
Finland, which shares a 1,340-kilometer (830-mile) border with Russia, dropped decades of military non-alignment to join NATO in April 2023 in the wake of the invasion of Ukraine, enraging the Kremlin.
“Russian intelligence capacity in Europe has suffered due to the war, and Russia is preparing to restore this capacity,” SUPO said in a statement.
“Russian intelligence and influencing resources currently tied to Ukraine will become available to be used elsewhere after the war.”
SUPO said Finland would remain of interest to Russia as “a NATO country between the Baltic Sea and the Arctic region.”
If relations between Europe and Russia improve, “the intelligence threat posed by Russia to Finland will become more diverse, with previous operating methods complemented by methods proven effective in the current environment,” Juha Martelius, Director of SUPO, said.
“These include the extensive utilization of proxy actors and intelligence gathering from bases on Russian soil,” he added.
Finland has in the past accused Moscow of “hybrid warfare” in orchestrating a surge of migrants at their shared border — a charge the Kremlin denied.
Last year, western officials accused Russian vessels of sabotaging undersea communications and power cables in several high-profile incidents in the Baltic Sea in recent months.
But SUPO warned about attributing too many incidents to Russia.
“As various events are readily attributed to Russia, Russian influencing against Finland may appear more extensive than it truly is,” it said.