PARIS/BAMAKO (Reuters) – Airlines from neighbouring countries and former colonial ruler France cancelled flights to Mali on Monday, helping isolate a military junta under regional sanctions for trying to extend its hold on power.
The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), on Sunday agreed https://www.reuters.com/world/africa/mali-eyes-elections-four-years-west-african-bloc-mulls-sanctions-2022-01-09 a raft of restrictions against Mali, including the suspension of financial transactions, over the interim authorities’ failure to hold democratic elections next month as agreed after a 2020 military coup.
Neighbours also vowed to close road and air borders. Ivory Coast’s national carrier Air Cote d’Ivoire halted flights to the Malian capital Bamako on Monday. Flights from Senegal were also disrupted, according to a Reuters reporter trying to enter Mali.
Air France had also cancelled flights, an airline spokesperson said, because of security risks, without providing further detail. The head of Mali’s airports, Lassina Togola, said in a statement that Air France flights on Monday were cancelled but not suspended long term.
Mali’s military-led authorities have condemned the latest sanctions as illegal and illegitimate. “The Malian government calls on the public to show calmness and restraint,” it said in a statement in the early hours of Monday.
This is the bloc’s toughest stance on Mali since it implemented similar measures in the immediate aftermath of President Boubacar Ibrahim Keita’s ouster in August 2020.
Those sanctions, which caused a sharp drop in imports to the landlocked country, were lifted inside two months after the authorities promised an 18-month transition to civilian rule.
FURTHER HARDSHIP
The bloc hopes renewed economic pressure, including cutting Mali off from regional financial markets and trade of non-essential goods, will push Bamako to rethink the latest proposal to delay presidential and legislative elections to December 2025 – nearly four years after they were supposed to be held.
The Malian government has promised it will try to ensure a normal supply of goods to the public, but sanctions are likely to further hobble the economy in one of the world’s poorest countries where an Islamist insurgency rages, fuelled in part by widespread poverty.
Foreign gold miners Hummingbird Resources and , which have operations in Mali, said they were monitoring the situation in the wake of the sanctions decision.
Mali’s political upheaval has deepened tensions with France, which has thousands of soldiers deployed across West Africa’s Sahel region to battle the insurgents.
For now, some residents in Bamako shrugged off the sanctions, saying they supported the government’s strategy. “We cannot be independent without suffering, we have to accept suffering,” said electronics store owner Aboubacar Yalcouye.
(Reporting by Sudip Kar-Gupta, Tiemoko Diallo and Idrissa Sangare; Additional reporting by Cheick Diouara, Fadimata Kontao and Helen Reid; Writing by Sudip Kar-Gupta and Alessandra Prentice, Editing by Louise Heavens, Edward McAllister, William Maclean)