Mali fuel blockade
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- At least 300 tankers destroyed
| Mali fuel blockade | |||||||
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| Part of Mali War of the Sahel War | |||||||
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| Unknown | ||||||
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| Unknown | 2+ soldiers killed | ||||||
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An ongoing fuel blockade is being administered by Jama'at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM) against cities in southern Mali. The blockade began on September 3, 2025, when JNIM spokesman Abou Houzeifa al-Bambari announced it in a video. Since the start of the blockade, over 300 fuel tankers have been destroyed en route from Senegal, Ivory Coast, and Guinea. Some fuel was able to enter the towns of Bamako, Ségou, Kayes, San, and Mopti in November and December 2025.
Analysts have referred to the blockade as a siege[2] on Mali, and purported that the blockade was an attempt to put pressure on the Malian junta and eventually take over Bamako and other cities.[3][4][5]
Jama'at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin is an al-Qaeda-affiliated coalition of jihadist groups formed in 2017 that is currently waging an insurgency against the governments of Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger, with a presence in Benin and Togo.[6] In areas under its influence, the group has taxed vehicles transporting people or commodities across Mali and between Mali, Burkia Faso, and Niger.[6] These activities have largely occurred in and around Mopti Region, Tombouctou Region, and Gao Region, where the group holds the most influence.[6] Despite Malian government efforts through the deployment of the Russian Wagner Group and Turkish drones, JNIM has expanded further south into Koulikoro Region and Sikasso Region in 2024 and 2025.[7] In July 2025, JNIM launched a failed simultaneous attack on Malian military outposts in Kayes, Ségou, Bamako, and other sites in western and southern Mali.[8]
Mali, being a landlocked country, is entirely dependent on its coastal West African neighbors for imports like fuel. These fuel tankers are transported on roads coming from Senegal, Guinea, Ivory Coast, and sometimes Mauritania.[8] 95% of Malian fuel imports come from Senegalese and Ivorian trading routes.[7] The main road between Senegal and Mali, National Road 1 (NR1), goes through the city of Kayes. JNIM militants, preachers, and sympathizers had been spotted by locals in western Mali prior to the blockade. Their strategy was to play on tensions between village chiefs and residents, preach that Shari'a law was less corrupt and more fair than Malian government law, and gain a following large enough to become a JNIM cell.[8]