France–Mali relations

France–Mali relations refers to the current and historical relations between France and Mali.

French–Malian relations

France

Mali

France was the former colonial overlord of Mali, then known as French Sudan, in which it ruled from the capital in Bamako, later becoming capital of newborn Republic of Mali. French rule had influenced Mali in several aspects, such as the adoption of French language as main language of Mali. Due to this, France and Mali have a strong connection.[1] Both are members of Organisation internationale de la Francophonie. There are over 120,000 Malians in France.

Recent relations

Northern Mali conflict

In response to the rise of al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb in 2012 following the collapse of Azawad as part of Northern Mali conflict, France deployed 4,000 troops and sent many military equipments in part of Operation Serval. France has been very cautious of Mali's situation, as Mali was a former colony of France and has ties with France.[2][3][4]

In 2017, President Emmanuel Macron had vowed to fight every terrorist in Mali.[5]

Resident diplomatic missions

Embassy of Mali in Paris
  • France has an embassy in Bamako.
  • Mali has an embassy in Paris.
gollark: There were also fewer of them working on problems like this than we have now, and they may have missed retrospectively-obvious things.
gollark: Tradition is *a* reason to think something might be better, but a fairly weak one, since the people of the past had rather different values, and not tools like computer simulations or more recent mathematical analyses of voting systems.
gollark: Also, yes, the context is quite different so reasons from then may not apply.
gollark: It's also possible that more complex systems may have been impractical before computers came along, although that doesn't apply to, say, approval voting.
gollark: First-past-the-post is the simplest and most obvious thing you're likely to imagine if you want people to "vote for things", and it's entirely possible people didn't look too hard.

See also

References

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