Malian Foreign Minister Abdoulaye Diop said on Friday that his government was “ruling nothing out” regarding its relations with France, amid fraught tensions between the two countries.
Speaking to French broadcaster RFI, he added that the question of French troops leaving the conflict-torn country “is not on the table for the moment.”
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France, Mali’s former colonial power, has thousands of troops deployed in Mali as part of anti-militant force.
The Sahel state has been struggling to contain an Islamist insurgency that first emerged in 2012, before spreading to neighboring Burkina Faso and Niger.
Diop’s intervention came after French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian told media earlier on Friday that “things cannot stay the way they are” between the French government and Mali’s ruling military junta.
Relations between the two countries have deteriorated sharply since Mali’s army staged a coup in August 2020.
Earlier this month, the West Africa bloc ECOWAS imposed a trade embargo and shut borders with Mali, in a decision backed by France, the United States and European Union.
The move followed a proposal by Mali’s junta to stay in power for up to five years before staging elections — despite international demands that it respect a promise to hold the vote in February.
Diop, referring to Le Drian’s statements, said that engaging with Mali should not be done via the media.
“Mali is ruling nothing out,” Diop told RFI, referring to the country’s relationship with France.
“The threats, the invective, the insults must stop to give way to a realistic engagement, he added.
“If a presence at a given moment is judged to be contrary to the interests of Mali, we will not hesitate to assume our responsibilities,” Diop said, adding that “we are not at that point.”
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