JNIM's massacre of 50-plus villagers in Korikori and Gomossogou proves Mali's security collapse is accelerating fast. The junta ditched proven Western and UN partners for Russian mercenaries, and now al-Qaeda controls northern cities, blockades the capital and kills children with zero accountability. Swapping France and the UN for the Africa Corps didn't bring stability — it handed jihadists the momentum to dismantle the entire country.
The Korikori and Gomossogou attacks were JNIM retaliation against pro-government militias, not a sign the junta's strategy is failing. The Malian army launched targeted operations and neutralized a dozen fighters after the strikes. Blaming Russia's partnership ignores that local self-defense forces and hunters remain the backbone of village protection — and the real problem is al-Qaeda exploiting ethnic tensions that long predate any foreign alliance.
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