Mali Releases 100 Al-Qaeda Prisoners for Fuel Convoy Access in 2026
Mali freed over 100 suspected jihadists to stop attacks on fuel trucks. The junta says it doesn't negotiate with terrorists — but French media tells a different story.

Mali released more than 100 al-Qaeda prisoners this week. Not for hostages. For petrol.
The military junta that runs the country freed suspected members of JNIM — the al-Qaeda affiliate that's been strangling Mali's fuel supply since September 2025 — in exchange for a truce on convoy attacks. Fuel trucks can now reach Bamako, the capital of 3.3 million people. The price: opening the prison doors.
A Malian government source told RFI what Bamako has always maintained: "We do not negotiate with terrorists." The released prisoners were already heading back to central and northern Mali before that statement was printed.
Six months of siege
JNIM declared a fuel blockade in September. On September 15, the group attacked a convoy of more than 100 fuel tankers under military escort, destroying at least 40 of them in a single strike. That attack alone removed millions of litres of fuel from a country that imports every drop — Mali is landlocked, surrounded by desert and conflict.
Black market petrol in Bamako hit 3,000 CFA francs per litre, a 200% increase. Schools and universities shut down. Electricity became intermittent. The truckers' union halted operations entirely because the roads were too dangerous. The U.S. Embassy told all Americans to leave the country.
The junta had one card to play: 1,000 Russian Africa Corps soldiers, the successors to the Wagner Group, paid nearly $1 billion to escort convoys. It wasn't enough. JNIM kept attacking. By March 2026, Carnegie's Africa researchers noted, "access to fuel has still not fully resumed in Bamako."
So the junta cut a deal. The truce reportedly holds until Tabaski — Eid al-Adha — at the end of May.
The story 5 billion people didn't see
RFI ran a detailed account. TV5Monde led with it. Jeune Afrique, Revolution Africaine, and Africa Radio all covered the prisoner release as front-page news. In francophone Africa, this is the defining story of the week.
In English? AFP filed a wire. A handful of Nigerian outlets picked it up. CNN, the BBC, the New York Times — silence. No major English-language outlet ran the story.
This isn't just a coverage gap. It's a comprehension gap. The Hormuz crisis dominates every English-language news cycle. Oil prices, shipping tolls, market swings — all framed through the lens of countries that can still afford fuel. Mali can't afford fuel and can't get it delivered. The global energy crisis and a six-month jihadi siege are hitting the same country at the same time, and the combination is invisible outside French-speaking media.
What it means
When a government releases 100 prisoners from a group affiliated with al-Qaeda — the same group that destroyed 40 fuel tankers in a single attack — you're not watching a negotiation. You're watching a state admit it can't perform its most basic function: keeping the lights on.
Twenty-six million people live in Mali. Their government chose fuel over security because the alternative was a capital city going dark. The released prisoners are already heading home.
The truce lasts until late May. Nobody's said what happens after that.
Sources & Verification
Based on 5 sources from 4 regions
- Africanews/AFPAfrica
- RFIEurope
- ReutersInternational
- Human Rights WatchInternational
- Carnegie EndowmentNorth America
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