- Azawad rebel forces said FPV drones and missiles struck a Malian army and Russia-linked Africa Corps base in Anéfis, reportedly triggering secondary explosions at an ammunition depot
- The reported attack highlights the growing use of low-cost FPV drones by insurgent forces to target fixed military positions and logistics infrastructure in the Sahel
Azawad rebel forces said they carried out a drone and missile strike on a military compound in Anefis, in Mali’s Kidal region, on March 30, targeting positions used by the Malian Armed Forces (FAMa) and Russian personnel from Africa Corps.
The reported attack appears to be part of a continued escalation in northern Mali, where Tuareg-led separatist forces have intensified operations against Malian government troops and their Russian allies. The location is operationally relevant because Anéfis sits on a key route between Kidal and other northern positions, making it a staging area for troop movements and logistics.
According to the Front de libération de l’Azawad, multiple first-person-view (FPV) drones and missiles penetrated the perimeter of the camp before striking military infrastructure inside the compound. The group’s official spokesperson said the “enemy suffered heavy losses and major material damage,” while local sources cited by the movement reported columns of smoke rising from inside the base after the strike.
The rebel statement further claimed that the initial drone strikes triggered secondary explosions after a munitions storage site used by Africa Corps caught fire. Those secondary detonations are said to have caused additional destruction across the facility. At this stage, neither the Malian military nor Russian authorities have publicly confirmed the extent of the damage or casualty figures.
As reported by The Defence Blog in earlier coverage, Russia’s Africa Corps has been operating armored vehicles and helicopters in Mali as part of Moscow’s formalized expeditionary presence following the replacement of Wagner-linked assets. Previous reporting documented the deployment of BMP-3 infantry fighting vehicles and Mi-8 helicopters in the country, underscoring Russia’s continued military footprint in support of Bamako.
The Front de libération de l’Azawad described the strike as its seventh announced operation in March 2026. That tempo suggests a sustained campaign rather than an isolated action. Earlier this month, on March 4, the group said it had struck a joint FAMa and Africa Corps patrol in the Adghar-Takalot area south of Kidal, reportedly destroying two military vehicles, including an armored vehicle, and causing fatalities and injuries among government and Russian personnel.
This latest strike follows a series of previous confrontations involving the same area of operations. Open-source reporting from 2025 documented a major rebel ambush near Anoumalane, between Aguelhok and Anéfis, where multiple vehicles belonging to Malian forces and Africa Corps were reportedly destroyed or captured.


