Mali's military rulers were plunged into their gravest security crisis in years on Sunday after a weekend of coordinated nationwide attacks by jihadist fighters and Tuareg separatists killed the country's defence minister and reportedly handed a strategic northern city to rebels. Defence Minister Sadio Camara, a senior member of the ruling junta and seen by many as a potential future leader, was killed Saturday by a car bomb planted outside his home in Kati, a military stronghold roughly 15 kilometres north of the capital Bamako. His second wife and two of his grandchildren also died in the blast, according to relatives. The attack is believed to have been carried out by the al-Qaeda-linked Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims (JNIM). The offensive, which began at dawn Saturday, was synchronised between JNIM and the Tuareg-dominated Azawad Liberation Front (FLA). Targets included the Kati base, Bamako's international airport, and towns across central and northern Mali...
'This Is Not Venezuela': Iranian Sources Vow to Forcefully Break Blockade, Defend Sovereignty Over Hormuz
Iranian state-affiliated media is projecting a posture of open defiance toward Washington, with senior commanders, lawmakers, and intelligence officials quoted as vowing to "forcefully break" what Iranian sources call an American "naval blockade" of Iran's ports and warning the United States that "this is not Venezuela." The framing, carried across Mehr News Agency, Tasnim News Agency, and Press TV, casts the Strait of Hormuz as sovereign Iranian territory and rejects any US role in setting its rules. The following account is based entirely on Iranian sources and could not be independently verified. The sharpest formulation came from Brigadier General Mohammad-Jafar Asadi, deputy for inspection at the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters, in remarks carried by Mehr News Agency. Asadi was quoted as declaring that "Americans have no right to express opinions about the Strait of Hormuz," describing the Persian Gulf as a matter solely for Iran a...