The Prague Post - Jihadist fuel blockade makes life a struggle in Mali's capital

EUR -
AED 4.261808
AFN 75.420029
ALL 96.190693
AMD 443.957053
ANG 2.07693
AOA 1064.002262
ARS 1667.727331
AUD 1.76607
AWG 2.088554
AZN 1.975381
BAM 1.949579
BBD 2.336874
BDT 141.837437
BGN 1.957619
BHD 0.43738
BIF 3440.312591
BMD 1.160308
BND 1.502426
BOB 8.01735
BRL 6.220064
BSD 1.160313
BTN 102.283963
BWP 15.443723
BYN 3.954334
BYR 22742.032644
BZD 2.333554
CAD 1.617777
CDF 2582.845602
CHF 0.927204
CLF 0.027833
CLP 1091.86157
CNY 8.237083
CNH 8.23576
COP 4498.803371
CRC 581.751318
CUC 1.160308
CUP 30.748156
CVE 110.142212
CZK 24.374239
DJF 206.209664
DKK 7.468043
DOP 74.49289
DZD 150.22596
EGP 54.875909
ERN 17.404617
ETB 178.542363
FJD 2.628218
FKP 0.873943
GBP 0.879479
GEL 3.161813
GGP 0.873943
GHS 12.618342
GIP 0.873943
GMD 84.124408
GNF 10069.150902
GTQ 8.887757
GYD 242.749639
HKD 9.016694
HNL 30.481553
HRK 7.535967
HTG 151.817556
HUF 388.350348
IDR 19221.368738
ILS 3.774492
IMP 0.873943
INR 102.554617
IQD 1520.003202
IRR 48805.434869
ISK 144.017077
JEP 0.873943
JMD 185.418383
JOD 0.822684
JPY 177.151185
KES 150.031433
KGS 101.468994
KHR 4664.437388
KMF 490.810322
KPW 1044.271673
KRW 1655.271431
KWD 0.356133
KYD 0.966915
KZT 613.311028
LAK 25178.678666
LBP 103998.496029
LKR 353.252871
LRD 212.858879
LSL 19.853265
LTL 3.426087
LVL 0.701858
LYD 6.306236
MAD 10.693974
MDL 19.719082
MGA 5238.789798
MKD 61.613997
MMK 2435.976438
MNT 4168.631803
MOP 9.286968
MRU 46.510929
MUR 52.805448
MVR 17.764352
MWK 2014.863221
MXN 21.444228
MYR 4.858787
MZN 74.155782
NAD 19.852429
NGN 1684.105637
NIO 42.640746
NOK 11.625495
NPR 163.653942
NZD 2.014528
OMR 0.446134
PAB 1.160318
PEN 3.934022
PGK 4.914193
PHP 68.15761
PKR 325.988446
PLN 4.242314
PYG 8241.738473
QAR 4.224699
RON 5.085281
RSD 117.24561
RUB 92.825223
RWF 1683.026446
SAR 4.351623
SBD 9.55002
SCR 16.018662
SDG 697.928686
SEK 10.923167
SGD 1.505795
SHP 0.870531
SLE 26.861273
SLL 24331.073613
SOS 697.925794
SRD 44.838909
STD 24016.028559
STN 24.772571
SVC 10.152606
SYP 12831.257632
SZL 19.852477
THB 37.559617
TJS 10.686188
TMT 4.07268
TND 3.40672
TOP 2.717557
TRY 48.696772
TTD 7.859026
TWD 35.569812
TZS 2854.274752
UAH 48.792606
UGX 4022.218244
USD 1.160308
UYU 46.242453
UZS 13929.495198
VES 254.515079
VND 30557.865904
VUV 141.292498
WST 3.243766
XAF 653.879111
XAG 0.024392
XAU 0.000295
XCD 3.135789
XCG 2.091155
XDR 0.812734
XOF 653.832244
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.907128
ZAR 19.945958
ZMK 10444.158169
ZMW 25.497086
ZWL 373.618634
  • RBGPF

    -0.0900

    79

    -0.11%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    24.24

    -0.08%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    15.4

    -0.39%

  • VOD

    -0.3350

    11.9

    -2.82%

  • NGG

    -1.1000

    75.55

    -1.46%

  • GSK

    2.2300

    45.93

    +4.86%

  • BTI

    -0.7400

    51.72

    -1.43%

  • RIO

    0.5900

    72.58

    +0.81%

  • AZN

    -0.3800

    82.23

    -0.46%

  • RELX

    -1.5400

    44.69

    -3.45%

  • BP

    0.7400

    35.2

    +2.1%

  • BCC

    -2.0400

    70.33

    -2.9%

  • JRI

    -0.2200

    13.83

    -1.59%

  • SCS

    -0.7200

    15.96

    -4.51%

  • CMSD

    -0.0800

    24.56

    -0.33%

  • BCE

    -0.0800

    23.49

    -0.34%

Jihadist fuel blockade makes life a struggle in Mali's capital
Jihadist fuel blockade makes life a struggle in Mali's capital / Photo: - - AFP

Jihadist fuel blockade makes life a struggle in Mali's capital

In Bamako's business district, hundreds of cars and motorcycles sit stranded day and night on a boulevard, waiting for one of three side-by-side petrol stations to finally have fuel.

Text size:

Jihadists have rendered everyday life in Mali increasingly impossible in recent weeks via a fuel blockade that has brought the west African country to its knees.

"I've been here for three days. I've spent two nights here", Karim Coulibaly, a bus driver in his 30s, told AFP from the line in the capital, adding that the lack of fuel had rendered him "unemployed".

Over the course of three days, only one tanker arrived to replenish the stations' tanks, and the fuel was gone within an hour, as authorities watched on.

Since back-to-back coups in 2020 and 2021, Mali has been ruled by a military junta that is struggling to counter various armed groups, particularly the Al-Qaeda-linked Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims (JNIM), which is waging the blockade.

Throughout the capital, fuel is being rationed at 10,000 CFA ($17.75), or about 13 litres (3.4 gallons) of gasoline.

A litre purchased at the pump resells on the black market for around three times the initial price, residents told AFP.

"We have no choice. It's take it or leave it," one customer said, asking to remain anonymous for security reasons.

Since September, JNIM has been targeting fuel tankers, particularly those coming from Senegal and Ivory Coast, through which the majority of Mali's imported goods transit.

- Killed, kidnapped, ambushed -

JNIM has recently appeared to be seeking to isolate Bamako by increasing operations on the surrounding roads.

Many tankers have been set on fire, while drivers and soldiers have been killed or kidnapped in jihadist ambushes.

JNIM is retaliating against the authorities' ban on the sale of fuel at locations other than service stations in rural areas, a move meant to dry up the jihadists' fuel supply lines, according to authorities.

The blockade has hit the capital particularly hard the past two weeks, with the landlocked Sahel nation's economy grinding to a halt.

"I haven't gone to work for a week," said Oumar Diallo, a civil servant waiting in the kilometre-long queue.

Meanwhile, the US embassy in Mali urged American citizens Tuesday to "depart immediately", citing the "unpredictability of Bamako's security situation".

On Wednesday, Italy and Germany also asked their nationals to leave the country as swiftly as possible.

- No electricity, no work -

The shortage is also exacerbating severe and recurrent power outages that have crippled the Malian economy for the past five years.

The supply of electricity has been reduced from 19 hours a day to six by provider Energie du Mali (EDM).

Mamadou Coulibaly, an electrician, has been out of work for a week. In addition, the 23-year-old's phone and external power banks have no power, meaning he can no longer communicate per usual.

At the last client's house he visited, he waited for hours for the electricity come back on so he could locate the electrical fault, but it never returned.

To get home, he had to push his motorcycle for 20 kilometres (12 miles).

"Since then, I've been here without money, without work, without any means of transportation," he said.

The junta announced Sunday evening that class was cancelled at schools and universities for two weeks due to the shortages.

In the middle of harvest season, some agricultural machinery has been rendered inoperable without fuel, with the shortages having struck daily life outside the capital several weeks earlier.

"Usually this time of year rice and millet prices drop because it's harvest time," Ousmane Dao, a 32-year-old grain vendor at a Bamako market, told AFP. "This year, it's not the case."

- Of spaghetti and solar panels -

In grocery stores, food stocks are low.

"We're starting to run out of spaghetti, macaroni and yogurt, even though they're made here," Hamidou Maiga told AFP from his Bamako grocery store. "Suppliers don't have the means to produce them because of the lack of electricity."

The junta has remained silent on the situation so far.

Bamako residents are grappling for solutions, with the more affluent installing solar panels to generate their own electricity.

"Everyone who can afford it has installed solar panels at home and in their offices," an EDM sales representative told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Like many young motorcyclists, 22-year-old mechanic Chaka Doumbia now relies on improvisation.

"I mix paint solvent with alcohol. With that you can get your engine running," he said.

The mixture, if not properly measured, can set an engine on fire.

E.Cerny--TPP