
The Alliance of Sahel States is set to hold its second summit of heads of state on 22 and 23 December 2025 in Mali, a meeting expected to carry significant weight amid ongoing political and security restructuring in the region.
The announcement followed a gathering of the foreign ministers of Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger in Ouagadougou, where they met to finalise key strategic documents that will be presented to their leaders at the December summit.
According to officials, the upcoming session aims to strengthen the institutional framework of the alliance, advance the creation of shared structures in areas such as security, diplomacy, and the economy, and accelerate cooperation in the fight against terrorism. The summit will also deepen the sovereign integration drive launched by the three countries in 2024, an initiative they say is central to reclaiming political and strategic autonomy in the Sahel.
The Bamako summit is expected to be a decisive moment for the alliance as it works to establish itself as a long-term platform for stability, collective defence, and economic development. With the three member states moving further away from ECOWAS and aligning more closely with one another, observers believe the decisions taken at the meeting could shape the political and security direction of the Sahel for years to come.
As regional insecurity persists and the alliance continues to redefine its place in the continental and global arena, the Bamako gathering will be watched closely for signs of how the AES intends to navigate rising threats, external pressures, and its ambitions for deeper integration.
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