DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — The funeral was held on Thursday of ‘s former defense minister , a key architect of the military government’s security partnership with Russia.
Camara was killed during last weekend’s in the West African nation, the largest in over a decade.
His death, and the major setback endured by the Malian army and its , risk creating divisions within the junta and could lead it to reconsider its partnership with Moscow, analysts say.
After two days of national mourning, a funeral ceremony for Camara was attended by junta leader and broadcast live on national television. The coffin was draped in the green, yellow and red of the Malian flag while large portraits of the former defense minister lined the ceremony hall.
Camara was born in 1979 in Kati, the same garrison town near the capital Bamako where he was killed when a car bomb exploded outside his home on Saturday.
As a field officer, he was deployed to northern Mali in the late 2000s, amid a rise in rebellions by armed groups, some linked to Al-Qaeda. After graduating from a military academy, he went abroad on several training assignments, including at a military academy in Russia.
Malians first became familiar with Camara when, as a colonel, he appeared on national television in August 2020 among a group of five officers who had President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita.
The officers accused Keita of being propped up by France and not doing enough to contain the rampant militant attacks in the country. They pledged to provide more security.
Following the coup, the new junta turned to Russia as its new security partner, expelling French troops and U.N. peacekeepers.
Camara quickly came to play a central role in establishing Russia as Mali’s main security partner. He served as defense minister under both of Mali’s successive military governments — first following the 2020 coup and then reappointed after a second coup in May 2021 which brought Goïta to power.
Ulf Laessing, head of the Sahel program at the Germany-based Konrad Adenauer Foundation, said Camara was the “architect of cooperation with Russia,” proposing the deployment of Russian mercenaries in 2021 and the expulsion of the U.N. peacekeeping mission, known as MINUSMA.
Camara, who made frequent trips to Moscow, played a key role in the coups and his stewardship of the war effort made him an indispensable figure for the junta despite a deteriorating security situation, according to Laessing.
On Monday, the recently created — a Russian military unit that reports to the defense ministry in Moscow, estimated to have around 2,000 troops in Mali — said its fighters had withdrawn from Kidal, two days after separatists said they had taken the key northern city.
Rida Lyammouri, senior fellow at the Policy Center for the New South, a Morocco-based think tank, said Camara’s death and a growing frustration from the population and military leadership over the Russian mercenaries inability to curb the insurgencies, could result in the junta reconsidering its partnership with Moscow.
Goita, who on Tuesday, “seems open to collaboration with some Western countries, such as the United States,” said Laessing.
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