Mali to get €520mn aid from European Union over next two years

Funds will help African nation rebuild after a year of bloody conflict

Malian soldiers point their AK-47 rifles during a training session given by a French army officer in Koulikoro earlier this month. The training session is part of a recently launched European Union training mission to reform Mali’s army. Photograph: Emilie Regnier/Reuters
Malian soldiers point their AK-47 rifles during a training session given by a French army officer in Koulikoro earlier this month. The training session is part of a recently launched European Union training mission to reform Mali’s army. Photograph: Emilie Regnier/Reuters

The European Union will pledge more than half a billion euro to help Mali rebuild after months of conflict, European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said this morning.

“Tomorrow we will commit €520 million for Mali between 2013 and 2014,” Mr Barroso said ahead of a conference of aid donors in Brussels.

Mali's President Dioncounda Traore also told the briefing the country will hold presidential elections on July 28th.

“I do believe it will be kept to the 28th of July, we will do everything for the presidential elections to start on that day,” Traore said.

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The Malian government is seeking roughly €2 billion in support from the conference, which is being organised by the European Union, to help fund a €4.34 billion plan to keep the peace and help restore infrastructure to the country.

“If we can get to €1.5-1.6 billion then I would say we are about there,” Mali’s President Dioncounda Traore told the briefing.

“Mr Barroso announced a figure. I think that’s a good start. Tomorrow or the day after tomorrow, in a week or in a month, it is clear that the international community, the European Union, will inject a lot more than that.”

The former French colony in West Africa sought urgent military support from Paris in January to halt advances by Islamist rebels who had seized control of the northern two-thirds of the country.

Since the intervention, Islamist rebels have been pushed back from the main urban centres of northern Mali into the mountains and desert, but the French action has failed to stop rebels from waging a guerrilla war.

Over a year of conflict has also resulted in the exodus of tens of thousands of refugees to the surrounding countries of Burkina Faso, Mauritania, and Niger.

France is looking to withdraw thousands of its troops and hand over security duties to a UN peacekeeping mission.