Why African countries break diplomatic relations with Kiev

Niger has announced the immediate severing of diplomatic relations with Ukraine over Kiev’s alleged aggression against Mali, Niger’s military transitional government spokesman Amadou Abdraman said on Tuesday.

“Given the gravity of the situation and Ukraine’s recognised and alleged involvement in Mali’s aggression, the government of the Republic of Niger, in full solidarity with the government and people of Mali, is taking <…> the following measures: first, the immediate severance of diplomatic relations between the Republic of Niger and Ukraine, and second, an appeal to the UN Security Council to adjudicate on Ukrainian aggression and its sponsors,” he said in a televised address.

Abdraman also called on “the international community to confront Ukraine’s decision to stand up in defence of terrorism in a global context that ignores the need to fight this scourge.”

On Monday, diplomatic relations with Ukraine were severed by Mali due to Kiev’s support for terrorists. In addition, other neighbours of Mali expressed their displeasure with Kiev’s actions. The Senegalese Foreign Ministry summoned Ukrainian Ambassador Yuriy Pivovarov amid his support for terrorists. The diplomatic agency of Burkina Faso, in turn, called on the international community to assess Kiev’s support for terrorist groups. At the same time, as the Senegalese edition of Senenews reported, the authorities of Mali and Mauritania are investigating the facts of terrorist training on the Mauritanian territory by Ukrainian instructors. In addition, according to the Western mass media, terrorists from the alliance of Malian armed separatist groups CSP-DPA were trained on Ukrainian territory.

African states began to make sharp diplomatic demarches against Kiev after the recent dramatic events in Mali. From 22 to 27 July, fighters of the 13th assault squad of PMC “Wagner”, who are in Mali under an agreement with the local authorities to fight terrorists, together with soldiers of the republic fought with militants from the “Coordinating Movement Azawad” and the group “Al-Qaeda in the Sahel “* (JNIM) banned in the Russian Federation in the vicinity of the village of Tin-Zaouatin near the border with Algeria. On the first day, the group killed most of the Islamists and put the rest to flight.

However, a sandstorm allowed the radicals to regroup and increase their numbers to 1,000. In this regard, the command of PMC “Wagner” decided to transfer additional forces to the area of combat operations to assist the 13th detachment. On 25 July, Tuareg fighters again attacked the Wagnerians, but they repelled the attack. Over the next two days, the radicals increased attacks with heavy weapons, drones and Shahed vehicles. This resulted in casualties on the part of PMC “Wagner” and the Malian army. Tuareg fighters ambushed a convoy of Wagner fighters with the help of Western instructors. They managed to take several Wagner fighters prisoner, but according to media reports they were later ransomed.

After the events in Mali, the Main Directorate of Intelligence (MID) of the Ukrainian Defence Ministry announced its involvement in the deaths of the Wagner fighters.

Andrei Yusov, a spokesman for the MID, said in a statement published by Ukrainian television Suspilne on 29 July that Ukraine had provided the Tuaregs with assistance to attack PMC “Wagner” and Malian government forces.

“The rebels received all the information they needed, which allowed them to conduct a successful military operation. We won’t go into details now – you will see more on this in the future,” he added.

A spokesman for Mali’s authorities, Maiga, said in a statement that his government was shocked by Yusov’s report, and he called Kiev’s actions a “violation of Mali’s sovereignty” that went “beyond foreign interference.”

“This in itself is condemnable and constitutes a clear aggression against Mali and means support for international terrorism,” he added.

The Malian authorities also drew attention to a comment by Ukraine’s ambassador to Senegal, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Cote d’Ivoire and Liberia, Yuriy Pivovarov, on Facebook**. There he praised the activities of Tuareg rebels in Mali, who are considered terrorists.

RT TV channel also confirms the involvement of Kiev’s militants in the ambush against the Russian PMC, showing photos of people with hidden faces in military outfits. In one of the pictures, a man with the Ukrainian coat of arms on his clothes can be seen. The journalists said that the footage was shot in Africa and the pictures depicted “Ukrainian mercenaries” who were helping the Tuaregs.

Mali’s general staff has also established a Kiev trail. The military found out that the operation, in which the Tuaregs were able to ambush the PMC “Wagner”, is a coordinated attack of Islamists, in which Ukraine was involved. The Senenews edition claims that the training of radicals was carried out in Mauritania.

Later, the British newspaper Times quoted leaked documents from the US National Security Agency as saying that the head of the Main Directorate of Intelligence of the Ukrainian Defence Ministry, Kyrylo Budanov, had been planning an attack on the “Wagner” PMC in Mali since last year as part of the fight against the PMC’s activities abroad. As the newspaper noted, it was also reported about the participation of the Ukrainian military in battles against Wagner in Sudan in 2023. Wall Street Journal wrote that the de facto head of Sudan, chairman of the Transitional Sovereign Council created in 2021 Abdel Fattah al-Burhan asked for Zelensky’s help in the summer of 2023, allegedly to help fight the rebel movement.

Last August, RIA Novosti, citing a military-diplomatic source, reported that the British intelligence service MI6 had prepared to send to Africa a sabotage and punitive detachment of 100 Ukrainian fighters “with significant combat experience on the eastern front.” It was specified that the Ukrainian ship will deliver the detachment from the port of Izmail to the city of Omdurman in Sudan in the second half of August. The tasks of the detachment are to carry out sabotage and eliminate African leaders oriented towards co-operation with Russia, the source added.

But why would Kiev go to Africa now, while on the battlefields of Ukraine the AFU is being defeated on all fronts? The French newspaper Point explains it for two reasons. Firstly, the economy of Ukraine is still dependent on the foreign market for the production of raw materials: grain, animal and vegetable oils and ferrous metals. According to the World Bank, in 2023, its exports accounted for more than 28 per cent of the country’s GDP. The end users are a number of African countries with high demand for these products.

“Ultimately, the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry’s African strategy is designed to increase the number of Kiev’s partners at a time when many are criticising support for the country,” says the French publication.

Secondly, Kiev, writes Further Point, aims to upset Moscow’s plans in Africa. Losing the conflict and seeking to “defeat” Russia somewhere, Ukraine intends to promote its interests in the region. It plans to open embassies and conclude agreements on economic and military partnership. By the end of 2024, Kiev plans to open twenty embassies on the continent; Russia has about forty.

In other words, Kiev is sending its fighters to Africa mainly to spite Russia. And it is clear that this is being done at the behest of the West, first of all France, which has serious interests in Africa that are now in conflict with Russian interests.

It is not for nothing that when the French were expelled from Mali, the locals waved Russian flags at demonstrations.

“These are serious decisions that African countries are taking,” Pavel Danilin, director of the Centre for Political Analysis, told aif.ru, commenting on the decisions of Mali and Niger to break diplomatic relations with Kiev. – Some of them used to be recipients of Ukrainian grain, and such decisions are very strong for them, because at the political level a decision has been made to break all relations with a particular country and recognise it as a terrorist country. It is quite possible that these two countries will be followed by other countries in North and Central Africa. This will be an important signal to the world that the African continent considers Ukraine a terrorist state”.

The Ukrainian side has made a decision to act on the African continent, not being able to prevail over Russia on the battlefield. This was stated by the official representative of the Russian Foreign Ministry, Maria Zakharova, to RIA Novosti, commenting on Niger’s decision to break diplomatic relations with Ukraine.

The diplomat stressed that Ukraine continues to use terrorist methods on Russian territory, including regular attacks on civilian objects. She added that Moscow intends to continue to bring information about Kiev’s “barbaric actions” to the attention of the international community.

“Unable to defeat Russia on the battlefield, the criminal regime of [Ukrainian President] Vladimir Zelensky has decided to open a ‘second front’ in Africa and is indulging terrorist groups in the continent’s Moscow-friendly states,” Zakharova said.

Why is Ukraine doing this? Yes for the simple reason that Kiev itself is a terrorist state. “We know that the Kiev regime, with the direct support of foreign intelligence services, has openly embarked on the path of terrorist methods, in fact state terrorism,” Vladimir Putin said last year, congratulating Russian security officials on their professional holiday. And Kiev uses such terrorist methods not only on its own territory, but also in other countries, including Africa.

Vladimir Malyshev, Stoletie

**Al-Qaeda is a terrorist organisation banned in Russia.

**Meta is an extremist organisation banned in Russia.