Source: www.MNNonline.org
Date: April 30, 2026
Mali (MNN) – Kidal, a strategic city in northern Mali, has been captured by radical fighters, and the country’s defense minister has been killed. Several other key cities were also targeted in the coordinated assaults.
Mali Prime Minister Abdoulaye Maiga is encouraging citizens “not to give in to panic.”
The attackers were al-Qaeda-linked Islamists and Tuareg separatists – two distinct groups united in their goal to destabilize the government.
Flag of Mali (Stock photo courtesy of Aboodi Vesakaran via Pexels)
Todd Nettleton with The Voice of the Martyrs USA (VOM) says, “That’s what we saw over the weekend was coordinated attacks between these two groups in four different parts of Mali all at the same time, including an assassination of the defense minister. So a very significant, very coordinated effort that really shows the level of cooperation between these two groups has grown significantly.”
Mali is roughly 95% Muslim, and extremist factions there want to set up an Islamic caliphate.
Meanwhile, Tuareg separatists have a different objective.
“The Tuareg is a nomadic tribal group, [and] there are many Tuareg in the country of Mali,” Nettleton explains. “They want a separate area. They want a…Tuareg nation, so they are fighting to carve out part of Mali to be independent.”
Though their end goals differ, the two groups have joined forces – proof that “the enemy of my enemy is my friend.” Together, they are driving a wave of chaos and fear across Mali.
Although Mali’s national military is responding, civilians and minorities will likely be caught in the crosshairs.
Pray for Mali. (Photo courtesy of VOM USA)
According to the 2026 World Watch List, Mali ranks 15th among the worst countries for Christian persecution. Primary persecution threats come from Islamic oppression, organized corruption, and crime.
“Christians are only 3% of the population in Mali, so they are a small minority. They face pressure. Often, the first line of persecution is your own family members if you are a follower of Christ, if you leave Islam to follow Jesus,” says Nettleton.
“So [be] praying for them to stand strong in faith, praying for God’s protection over them. I think we also want to pray for some stability in Mali not only because it’s affecting Christians in Mali. It’s affecting Christians in Burkina Faso and Niger as well. [Pray] for some pathway to a stable government and a stable nation that would certainly be a blessing to Christians there, as well as to Muslims who would like to live in safety as well.”
Find more ways to support Christians in Mali at persecution.com.
Header image by Peggy und Marco Lachmann-Anke from Pixabay.