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Al-Qaeda group claims Mali army has left a northern town due to the spread of insurgency

Al Qaeda’s West -Africa affiliate announced on Monday a withdrawal of the Mali army from the northern town of Tessit as insurgents continue their offensive, which began with attacks across the country and near the capital.

The announcement comes two days after JNIM, a rebel group affiliated with the JNIM, and other groups claimed responsibility for attacks that included the killing of the defence minister and the destruction of the main army base near Bamako in the south.

Requests for comment from a Mali government spokesperson and an army spokesperson were not immediately answered.

The news of new rebel gains will raise concerns about the stability?of?the landlocked Sahel nation that has fought islamist insurgents more than a ten-year war and survived three coups since 2012

RUSSIAN PARAMILITARIES LEAVE TOWN ?FURTHER NORTH

JNIM, Jama'at Nusrat Al-Islam Wal-Muslimin, said in a statement on Monday that it would allow Malian forces to withdraw and hand over their weapons.

After fierce fighting at the weekend, the paramilitary Africa Corps group, controlled by the Russian Defence Ministry, announced earlier on Monday that its forces were withdrawn from Kidal, located around 375km north of Tessit.

Since taking power in 2020, the Mali military government led by Assimi Gouta has sought to strengthen defence cooperation with Russia, while shunning Western partners.

Goita is not seen in public since Saturday's attacks.

ARMY SAYS?FORCES RESPONSIBILITY AROUND KIDAL

Mali's chief of the army, General Oumar diarra, said on Sunday night to the state broadcaster that the military has tactically repositioned its forces in Kidal, and that ongoing operations are taking place in the region.

Kidal was a former'stronghold' of the Azawad Liberation Front (FLA), a Tuareg-dominated group that worked with JNIM in order to carry out the attacks on Saturday, which analysts and diplomatics described as being the largest coordinated insurgent attack in?Mali for years.

Bamako did not provide an "overall death count" for the violence. A government spokesperson expressed his condolences to "all civilians and military who died" in a statement broadcast on state TV on Sunday, without giving a specific number. (Reporting and editing by Andrew Heavens; Bamako Newsroom, Jessica Donati, Robbie Corey Boulet. Additional reporting by Jessica Donati.

(source: Reuters)