in Bamako after the
2021 Malian coup d'état and Russia in Moscow on 19 March 2023. Wagner had close ties to the ruling junta in Mali. In mid-September 2021, according to diplomatic and security sources, an agreement was close to being finalized that would allow the Wagner Group to operate in
Mali. According to conflicting sources, at least 1,000 PMCs or less would be deployed to Mali, which has been witnessing
a civil war since 2012, and the Wagner Group would be paid about 6 billion
CFA francs a month for training of the Malian military and providing protection for government officials. France, which previously ruled Mali as a colony, was making a diplomatic push to prevent the agreement being enacted. Since late May 2021, Mali has been ruled by a
military junta that came into power following
a coup d'état. In response, Malian prime minister
Choguel Kokalla Maïga, in his address to the
UN General Assembly, stated "The new situation resulting from the end of
Operation Barkhane puts Mali before a fait accompli – abandoning us, mid-flight to a certain extent – and it leads us to explore pathways and means to better ensure our security autonomously, or with other partners". The United Kingdom,
European Union and Ivory Coast also warned Mali not to engage in an agreement with the Wagner Group. Still, on 30 September, Mali received a shipment of four
Mil Mi-17 helicopters, as well as arms and ammunition, as part of a contract agreed in December 2020. The shipment was received by Mali's defence minister, who praised Russia as "a friendly country with which Mali has always maintained a very fruitful partnership". In late December, France published a joint statement also signed by the U.K., Germany, Canada and 11 other European governments that they have witnessed the deployment of the Wagner Group to Mali, with Russia's backing, and that they condemned the action. Mali denied the deployment, asking for proof by independent sources, but acknowledged "Russian trainers" were in the country as part of strengthening the military and security forces and that it was "only involved in a state-to-state partnership with the Russian Federation, its historical partner". French government sources stated the allegation of Wagner's deployment was based on factors that included the development of a new military base near Bamako's airport as well as "suspicious flight patterns". In January 2022, Malian army officials confirmed that some 400 Russian military advisors had arrived in the country and were present in several parts of Mali. Several officials, including a Western one, stated Russian "mercenaries" were deployed in Mali, but a Malian military source denied this. Still, an official from central Mali, stated there was both Russian advisors and PMCs present and that not all of the contractors were Russian nationals. Photos emerged of the PMCs in the town of
Ségou from the end of December 2021, where 200 Wagner contractors were reportedly deployed. It was reported that at the beginning of January 2022, clashes south of
Mopti between the contractors and jihadists left one PMC dead. In mid-January 2022, Wagner PMCs were deployed at a former French military base in
Timbuktu, in northern Mali. Subsequently, the US Army also confirmed the presence of the Wagner Group in Mali. By early April 2022, some 200 Malian soldiers and 9 police officers were receiving training in Russia. On 5 April 2022, Human Rights Watch published a report accusing Malian soldiers and Russian PMCs of executing around 300 civilians between 27 and 31 March, during
a military operation in Moura, in the
Mopti region, known as a hotspot of Islamic militants. According to the Malian military, more than 200 militants were killed in the operation, which reportedly involved more than 100 Russians. At the start of the operation on 27 March, Malian military helicopters landed near the town's market, after which soldiers were deployed and approached a group of around 30 jihadists, who fired at them, killing at least two "white soldiers", according to Human Rights Watch. , 2024. For a detailed map, see
here. On 19 April 2022, the first officially confirmed death of a Russian military advisor, said to be a Wagner member, took place when a military patrol hit a roadside bomb near the town of
Hombori. On 22 April 2022, three days after the French military handed over the Gossi military base to Malian forces, France claimed suspected Wagner Group PMCs buried a dozen bodies in a mass grave a few kilometres east of the base soon after the withdrawal, with the intent of blaming France. The French military published video images appearing to show 10 white soldiers covering bodies with sand, two days after a "sensor observed a dozen Caucasian individuals, most likely belonging to the Wagner Group" and Malian soldiers arriving at the burial site to unload equipment, according to a French military report. On 25 April 2022, the Al-Qaeda-linked
JNIM jihadist organisation claimed it had captured a number of Wagner Group members at the beginning of the month in the central
Ségou Region. In late June 2022, accusations surfaced against the Wagner Group that PMCs were looting towns and indiscriminately arresting people in the northern
Tombouctou Region with the Malian military, forcing civilians to flee to
Mauritania. Killings were also reported to have taken place. On 24 July, the US sanctioned three Malian officials for facilitating the Wagner Group's operations in their country. On 16 June 2023, the Malian government requested that
MINUSMA peacekeepers withdraw from Mali without delay. On 30 June, the UN Security Council approved the request for the removal of peacekeepers. Subsequently, in response to the alleged refusal by the Malian government to implement the Algiers agreement with the Tuareg rebels, the main groups that make up the
Coordination of Azawad Movements (CMA) – the
National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad, the
Arab Movement of Azawad, and the
High Council for the Unity of Azawad – withdrew from peace talks. They later merged into one group. On 9 September 2023, CMA rebels shot down the Malian airforce's only SU-25, while the JNIM shot down a Mi-8 helicopter operated by the Wagner Group. On 11 September 2023, the CMA declared itself to be at "war" with the junta. Following a number of deadly rebel attacks in September and October 2023, on military bases, government forces launched an offensive in the direction of the rebel stronghold of
Kidal, controlled by the CMA. Its primary destinations were to be, specifically, the localities of Tessalit and Aguelhok, towns that still maintain MINUSMA military bases within them. Clashes between the Malian army and the rebels erupted around
Anefif on 6 October, with the Malian army eventually taking control of the town. On 16 October, MINUSMA started their departure from the two bases, leaving Tessalit on 21 October, and Aguelhok on 23 October. As they were withdrawing from the base at Tessalit, Malian and Wagner troops were flown in to replace them. Two days later, the military, supported by Wagner, captured Kidal, with the PMCs subsequently allowing local residents in the city to take pictures and videos with them in their first public display in Mali. The residents in the videos greeted them as liberators. Before they entered the town, government and Wagner forces struck rebel targets in and around Kidal in drone strikes. On 22 November, the PMCs flew their flag over Kidal's fort. On 22 July 2024, a convoy of Wagner mercenaries and Malian soldiers engaged with rebels in
Inafarak, northern Mali, and successfully captured the community the next day. The convoy later moved to the commune of
Tinzaouaten, where it was ambushed by the Tuareg rebel group
Strategic Framework for the Defense of the People of Azawad on 25 July, and a
three-day battle ensued. Over the course of the fighting, the Wagner Group lost between 20 and 80 men according to Russian Telegram sources, making it their biggest loss in Mali since it was deployed there. On 6 June 2025, the Wagner Group announced that it was ending its deployment in Mali after "complet[ing] its mission" against insurgents in the country, claiming that it had killed thousands of militants and rebel commanders. On 12 June, an investigation led by journalist organization
Forbidden Stories found that the Wagner Group had abducted, detained, and tortured hundreds of civilians throughout its deployment in Mali, holding them in former UN camps and military bases shared with the Malian Armed Forces. == Suspected ==