
VOLTMANDER
279 posts




Day like this is when a window for Islamic State opens for transgressions in Burkina Faso's Dori and, especially today, in Ménaka.Wouldn't surprise me if IS Sahel decided to try the defences around Menaka and inside to see, if Russians are there or are too distracted by JNIM/FLA.





Claims of Major Offensive, Multiple City Falls in Mali Remain Unverified — Tensions Reported Across Several Fronts By: Zagazola Makama A wave of unverified reports circulating from Mali on Saturday has claimed large-scale coordinated attacks across multiple cities, including Kidal, Gao, Sévaré, Kati, and parts of Bamako, amid what some sources describe as a rapidly deteriorating security situation. According to the claims, armed groups allegedly launched a broad offensive involving simultaneous operations across northern and central Mali, with reports suggesting that Kidal had fallen and that fighting was ongoing in several strategic locations. Some accounts also alleged that military positions in parts of Gao and Sévaré were under pressure, while isolated claims circulated on social media about armed movement within Bamako. These reports, however, could not be independently verified at the time of filing this report. Additional allegations included assertions of attacks on military installations and strategic infrastructure, as well as claims of casualties involving senior officials. Authorities have not confirmed any of these incidents. Zagazola caution that the volume of conflicting narratives, video clips, and online claims reflects the high level of information disorder accompanying ongoing insecurity in the region, where multiple armed groups operate across vast and difficult terrain. The Malian authorities have not issued a comprehensive statement confirming the reported nationwide offensive or territorial losses. Military sources contacted in Bamako described the situation as “fluid” and urged the public to rely on verified official communications. Mali continues to face persistent threats from insurgent groups in the north and centre, with sporadic attacks, propaganda claims, and counterclaims contributing to an already complex security landscape. Further updates are expected as verification efforts continue.


What’s happening in Mali, and why Nigeria should be paying attention What’s happening in Mali right now is more than another round of violence. Recent coordinated attacks by groups like Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin and Islamic State in the Greater Sahara show a clear shift: these groups are becoming more organized, more ambitious, and more willing to directly challenge state control. They are no longer just staging hit-and-run attacks in remote areas. They are targeting major towns, military positions, and key routes, testing how far the state can hold. This matters because Mali has been the epicenter of the Sahel conflict for years. Despite coups, foreign interventions, and new security partnerships, the state is still struggling to contain the insurgency. In fact, the pressure is increasing. And when a conflict like this doesn’t get resolved, it doesn’t stay in one place, it spreads. That spread is already happening. Across Burkina Faso and Niger, similar groups are gaining ground, linking up, and turning what used to be separate crises into a single, cross-border insurgency. The Sahel is gradually becoming one connected battlefield where fighters, weapons, and tactics move freely across borders that are weakly controlled. For Nigeria, this is not a distant problem. It is a creeping security threat that is already at the edges and could deepen if ignored. The North-East remains under pressure from Boko Haram and Islamic State West Africa Province, but the bigger risk now is connection. As Sahel-based groups strengthen, the possibility of deeper coordination with insurgents inside Nigeria increases, in funding, training, and operations. At the same time, the North-West is becoming a serious vulnerability. States like Sokoto, Zamfara, and Kebbi sit close to Niger, where instability is rising. What began as banditry in this region could evolve into something more dangerous if jihadist groups successfully embed themselves, using existing criminal networks as a foundation. Then there is the North-Central, especially Niger State. It doesn’t get as much attention, but it is strategically critical. It connects the troubled northern regions to the rest of the country, including Abuja. If insecurity intensifies there, it shifts the problem from a distant northern issue to a national one, much closer to the political center. The pattern is hard to ignore. In the Sahel, weak governance creates space. Armed groups move in, consolidate, and then expand outward. Mali is simply the latest example of that cycle playing out at scale. Nigeria is not outside that cycle. It is on its southern edge, and potentially the next major front if the regional trend continues.


Massive bombshell. George Galloway directly accuses Emmanuel Macron and the French government of secretly funding and arming ISIS and Al-Qaeda in Mali. The West is intentionally using terrorists to overthrow African nations and steal their gold. Pure imperialism!






Nigeria Deploys 10 Warships, Two Helicopters, Special Forces To Combat Piracy, Oil Theft In Gulf Of Guinea



Mali’s Defence Minister General Sadio Camara's house in the garrison town of Kati came under attack amid simultaneous attacks across the West African country aje.news/ks0l1p





The town and major gold mining site of Intahaka, Gao region in northern Mali, becomes the third locality to be handed over peacefully from the Russian Africa Corps and Malian army to the FLA/JNIM coalition.





If extremely violent criminals are not imprisoned, eventually they will murder innocent people



Doing this while passing Nigerian businesses is funny. What is Ghana economy without Nigeria 😂












