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Conflict Module · Sahel · Force Atlas

MNLA — National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad

Force Atlas / Azawad movements — coordination & lineage / CMA — Coordination of Azawad Movements / MNLA — National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad

Formation

MNLA — National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad

The secular-nationalist separatist movement that launched the 2012 rebellion and declared Azawad — then lost it to its jihadist allies.

Azawad movementsVolunteer / irregularArmed movementMergedHistorical subordinationThe secular-nationalist separatist movement of the 2012 rebellion (historical)

Broad area of activity

Northern Mali; strongest historically around Kidal and Gao.

Notable history

Founded in late 2011 by northern activists and Libya returnees, the MNLA launched the January 2012 rebellion, declared Azawad’s independence in April — then lost its rebellion to its jihadist co-belligerents within months, a sequence that defines the difference between the separatist and jihadist projects. It anchored the CMA through the peace-process decade and dissolved into the FLA in 2024.

Strengths

The founding brand of modern Azawad nationalism.

Limitations

Repeatedly outgunned by jihadist rivals; its secular project constrained by dependence on tribal coalitions.

Lineage & institutional history

Formed 2011-10Reorganised 2024-11

Successors: Azawad Liberation Front (FLA)

Key events

17 Jan 2012high confidence

The 2012 rebellion begins

The MNLA, alongside jihadist fighters of Ansar Dine, attacks army garrisons across the north — including Aguelhok, where captured soldiers are massacred. The army, outgunned and under-supplied, collapses northward.

6 Apr 2012high confidence

Declaration of Azawad

With Gao, Timbuktu and Kidal in rebel hands, the MNLA unilaterally declares the independent state of Azawad. No state recognises it.

Sensitivity: HistoricalAssessment confidence: highStatus as of 2024-11Reviewed 2026-07-15Sources: Established historical record · International Crisis GroupMethodology