Bamako
Mali
Key facts and a structured country profile. π§Ύ Change log π True Size
22,634,423 (2025 est.)
1,240,192 sq km
Interior Western Africa, southwest of Algeria, north of Guinea, Cote d'Ivoire, and Burkina Faso, west of Niger
π§ Background
Present-day Mali is named after the Mali Empire that ruled the region between the 13th and 16th centuries. At its peak in the 14th century, it was the largest and wealthiest empire in West Africa and controlled an area about twice the size of modern-day France. Primarily a trading empire, Mali derived its wealth from gold and maintained several goldfields and trade routes in the Sahel. The empire also influenced West African culture through the spread of its language, laws, and customs, but by the 16th century, it had fragmented into mostly small chiefdoms. The Songhai Empire, previously a Mali dependency centered in Timbuktu, gained prominence in the 15th and 16th centuries. Under Songhai rule, Timbuktu became a large commercial center, well-known for its scholarship and religious teaching. Timbuktu remains a center of culture in West Africa today. In the late 16th century, the Songhai Empire fell to Moroccan invaders and disintegrated into independent sultanates and kingdoms. France, expanding from Senegal, seized control of the area in the 1890s and incorporated it into French West Africa as French Sudan. In 1960, French Sudan gained independence from France and became the Mali Federation. When Senegal withdrew after only a few months, the remaining area was renamed the Republic of Mali. Mali saw 31 years of dictatorship until 1991, when a military coup led by Amadou Toumani TOURE ousted the government, established a new constitution, and instituted a multi-party democracy. Alpha Oumar KONARE won Mali's first two democratic presidential elections in 1992 and 1997. In keeping with Mali's two-term constitutional limit, he stepped down in 2002 and was succeeded by Amadou Toumani TOURE, who won a second term in 2007. In 2012, rising ethnic tensions and an influx of fighters -- some linked to Al-Qaβida -- from Libya led to a rebellion and military coup. Following the coup, rebels expelled the military from the countryβs three northern regions, allowing terrorist organizations to develop strongholds in the area. With a 2013 French-led military intervention, the Malian government managed to retake most of the north. However, the governmentβs grasp in the region remains weak with local militias, terrorists, and insurgent groups competing for control. In 2015, the Malian Government and northern rebels signed an internationally mediated peace accord. Despite a 2017 target for implementation of the agreement, the signatories have made little progress. Terrorist groups were left out of the peace process, and terrorist attacks remain common. Ibrahim Boubacar KEITA won the Malian presidential elections in 2013 and 2018. Aside from security and logistic shortfalls, international observers deemed these elections credible. Terrorism, banditry, ethnic-based violence, and extra-judicial military killings plagued the country during KEITAβs second term. In 2020, the military arrested KEITA, his prime minister, and other senior members of the government and established a military junta called the National Committee for the Salvation of the People (CNSP). The junta then established a transition government and appointed Bah NβDAW, a retired army officer and former defense minister, as interim president and Colonel Assimi GOITA, the coup leader and chairman of the CNSP, as interim vice president. The transition governmentβs charter allowed it to rule for up to 18 months before calling a general election. In 2021, GOITA led a military takeover, arresting the interim president after a Cabinet shake-up removed GOITAβs key allies. GOITA was sworn in as transition president, and Choguel Kokalla MAIGA was sworn in as prime minister. In 2022, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) imposed sanctions on the transition government, and member states closed their borders with Mali after the transition government presented a five-year extension to the electoral calendar. The transition government and ECOWAS agreed to a new two-year timeline, which would have included presidential elections in February 2024, but the transition government postponed the elections indefinitely in September 2023 and withdrew from ECOWAS in January 2024.
πΊοΈ Geography
Interior Western Africa, southwest of Algeria, north of Guinea, Cote d'Ivoire, and Burkina Faso, west of Niger
17 00 N, 4 00 W
Africa
1,240,192 sq km
1,220,190 sq km
20,002 sq km
Slightly less than twice the size of Texas
7,908 km
Algeria 1,359 km; Burkina Faso 1,325 km; Cote d'Ivoire 599 km; Guinea 1,062 km; Mauritania 2,236 km; Niger 838 km, Senegal 489 km
0 km (landlocked)
None (landlocked)
Subtropical to arid; hot and dry (February to June); rainy, humid, and mild (June to November); cool and dry (November to February)
Mostly flat to rolling northern plains covered by sand; savanna in south, rugged hills in northeast
Hombori Tondo 1,155 m
Senegal River 23 m
343 m
Gold, phosphates, kaolin, salt, limestone, uranium, gypsum, granite, hydropower
35.5% (2023 est.)
Arable land: 6.8% (2023 est.)
Permanent crops: 0.2% (2023 est.)
Permanent pasture: 28.4% (2023 est.)
8.8% (2023 est.)
55.8% (2023 est.)
3,780 sq km (2012)
Lac Faguibine - 590 sq km note - the Niger River is the only source of water for the lake; in recent years the lake is dry
Niger (shared with Guinea [s], Niger, and Nigeria [m]) - 4,200 km; Senegal (shared with Guinea [s], Senegal, and Mauritania [m]) - 1,641 km note: [s] after country name indicates river source; [m] after country name indicates river mouth
Niger (2,261,741 sq km), Senegal (456,397 sq km), Volta (410,991 sq km)
Lullemeden-Irhazer Basin, Taodeni-Tanezrouft Basin
The overwhelming majority of the population lives in the southern half of the country, with greater density along the border with Burkina Faso, as shown in this population distribution map
Hot, dust-laden harmattan haze common during dry seasons; recurring droughts; occasional Niger River flooding
Landlocked; divided into three natural zones: the southern, cultivated Sudanese; the central, semiarid Sahelian; and the northern, arid Saharan
π₯ People and Societyβ¬οΈ Top
22,634,423 (2025 est.)
10,999,331
11,635,092
Malian(s)
Malian
Bambara 33.3%, Fulani (Peuhl) 13.3%, Sarakole/Soninke/Marka 9.8%, Senufo/Manianka 9.6%, Malinke 8.8%, Dogon 8.7%, Sonrai 5.9%, Bobo 2.1%, Tuareg/Bella 1.7%, other Malian 6%, from members of Economic Community of West Africa 0.4%, other 0.3% (2018 est.)
Bambara (official), French 17.2%, Peuhl/Foulfoulbe/Fulani 9.4%, Dogon 7.2%, Maraka/Soninke 6.4%, Malinke 5.6%, Sonrhai/Djerma 5.6%, Minianka 4.3%, Tamacheq 3.5%, Senoufo 2.6%, Bobo 2.1%, other 6.3%, unspecified 0.7% (2009 est.)
Muslim 93.9%, Christian 2.8%, animist 0.7%, none 2.5% (2018 est.)
46.8% (male 5,175,714/female 5,114,128)
50.1% (male 5,178,742/female 5,842,456)
3.1% (2024 est.) (male 334,299/female 345,268)
98.5 (2025 est.)
92.3 (2025 est.)
6.2 (2025 est.)
16.2 (2025 est.)
16.5 years (2025 est.)
15.7 years
17.1 years
2.88% (2025 est.)
39.44 births/1,000 population (2025 est.)
7.87 deaths/1,000 population (2025 est.)
-2.82 migrant(s)/1,000 population (2025 est.)
The overwhelming majority of the population lives in the southern half of the country, with greater density along the border with Burkina Faso, as shown in this population distribution map
46.2% of total population (2023)
4.57% annual rate of change (2020-25 est.)
2.929 million BAMAKO (capital) (2023)
1.03 male(s)/female
1.01 male(s)/female
0.89 male(s)/female
0.97 male(s)/female
0.95 male(s)/female (2024 est.)
19.2 years (2018 est.)
367 deaths/100,000 live births (2023 est.)
55.8 deaths/1,000 live births (2025 est.)
62.6 deaths/1,000 live births
52 deaths/1,000 live births
63.2 years (2024 est.)
60.9 years
65.6 years
5.26 children born/woman (2025 est.)
2.59 (2025 est.)
Urban: 94.7% of population (2022 est.)
Rural: 74.4% of population (2022 est.)
Total: 83.6% of population (2022 est.)
Urban: 5.3% of population (2022 est.)
Rural: 25.6% of population (2022 est.)
Total: 16.4% of population (2022 est.)
4.5% of GDP (2021)
5.7% of national budget (2022 est.)
0.19 physicians/1,000 population (2023)
0.2 beds/1,000 population (2018 est.)
Urban: 88.6% of population (2022 est.)
Rural: 49.3% of population (2022 est.)
Total: 67.2% of population (2022 est.)
Urban: 11.4% of population (2022 est.)
Rural: 50.7% of population (2022 est.)
Total: 32.8% of population (2022 est.)
8.6% (2016)
0.6 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)
0.09 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)
0 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)
0.02 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)
0.49 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)
6.9% (2025 est.)
13.1% (2025 est.)
0.6% (2025 est.)
15% (2024 est.)
79.2% (2018 est.)
15.9% (2018)
53.7% (2018)
2.1% (2018)
4.2% of GDP (2023 est.)
17.8% national budget (2024 est.)
35.5% (2018 est.)
46.2% (2018 est.)
25.7% (2018 est.)
7 years (2017 est.)
8 years (2017 est.)
6 years (2017 est.)
πΏ Environmentβ¬οΈ Top
Deforestation; soil erosion; desertification; loss of pasture land; inadequate supplies of potable water
Biodiversity, Climate Change, Climate Change-Kyoto Protocol, Climate Change-Paris Agreement, Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban, Desertification, Endangered Species, Hazardous Wastes, Law of the Sea, Ozone Layer Protection, Tropical Timber 2006, Wetlands, Whaling
Nuclear Test Ban
Subtropical to arid; hot and dry (February to June); rainy, humid, and mild (June to November); cool and dry (November to February)
35.5% (2023 est.)
Arable land: 6.8% (2023 est.)
Permanent crops: 0.2% (2023 est.)
Permanent pasture: 28.4% (2023 est.)
8.8% (2023 est.)
55.8% (2023 est.)
46.2% of total population (2023)
4.57% annual rate of change (2020-25 est.)
6.858 million metric tonnes of CO2 (2023 est.)
83 metric tonnes of CO2 (2023 est.)
6.858 million metric tonnes of CO2 (2023 est.)
48.5 micrograms per cubic meter (2019 est.)
1.937 million tons (2024 est.)
10.4% (2022 est.)
107 million cubic meters (2022 est.)
4 million cubic meters (2022 est.)
5.075 billion cubic meters (2022 est.)
120 billion cubic meters (2022 est.)
ποΈ Governmentβ¬οΈ Top
Republic of Mali
Mali
RΓ©publique de Mali
Mali
French Sudan, Sudanese Republic, Mali Federation
Name derives from the Mali Empire of the 13th to 16th centuries A.D.; the Mali name may come from a local ethnic group, the Malinke, whose name is derived from the words ma, meaning "mother," and dink, meaning "child" -- a reference to the matrilinear descent of Malinke families
Semi-presidential republic
Bamako
12 39 N, 8 00 W
UTC 0 (5 hours ahead of Washington, DC, during Standard Time)
The origin of the name is unclear, but it comes from the Bambara language and can refer either to a crocodile or to a person's name
19 regions (rΓ©gions, singular - rΓ©gion), 1 district*; Bamako*, Bandiagara, Bougouni, Dioila, Douentza, Gao, Kayes, Kidal, Kita, Koulikoro, Koutiala, Menaka, Mopti, Nara, Nioro, San, Segou, Sikasso, Taoudenni, Tombouctou (Timbuktu)
Civil law system based on the French civil law model and influenced by customary law; Constitutional Court reviews legislative acts
Several previous; latest drafted 13 October 2022 and submitted to Transition President Assimi GOITA; final draft completed 1 March 2023; approved by referendum 18 June 2023; validated by Constitutional Court 22 July 2023
Has not submitted an ICJ jurisdiction declaration; accepts ICCt jurisdiction
No
At least one parent must be a citizen of Mali
Yes
5 years
18 years of age; universal
Transition President Assimi GOITA (since 7 June 2021)
Transition Prime Minister Abdoulaye MAIGA (since 22 November 2024)
Council of Ministers appointed by the prime minister
President directly elected by absolute-majority popular vote in 2 rounds, if needed, for a 5-year term (eligible for a second term); prime minister appointed by the president
29 July 2018, with runoff on 12 August 2018
2018: Ibrahim Boubacar KEITA reelected president in second round; percent of vote in first round - Ibrahim Boubacar KEITA (RPM) 41.7%, Soumaila CISSE (URD) 17.8%, other 40.5%; percent of vote in second round - Ibrahim Boubacar KEITA 67.2%, Soumaila CISSE 32.8%
Transitional National Council (Conseil national de transition)
Unicameral
Transitional National Council (Conseil national de transition)
147 (all appointed)
Plurality/majority
Full renewal
12/5/2020
30.1%
December 2030
Supreme Court or Cour SuprΓͺme (consists of 19 judges organized into judicial, administrative, and accounting sections); Constitutional Court (consists of 9 judges)
Supreme Court judges appointed by the Ministry of Justice to serve 5-year terms; Constitutional Court judges selected - 3 each by the president, the National Assembly, and the Supreme Council of the Magistracy; members serve single renewable 7-year terms
Court of Appeal; High Court of Justice (jurisdiction limited to cases of high treason or criminal offenses by the president or ministers while in office); administrative courts (first instance and appeal); commercial courts; magistrate courts; labor courts; juvenile courts; special court of state security
African Solidarity for Democracy and Independence or SADI Alliance for Democracy and Progress or ADP-Maliba Alliance for Democracy in Mali-Pan-African Party for Liberty, Solidarity, and Justice or ADEMA-PASJ Alliance for the Solidarity of Mali-Convergence of Patriotic Forces or ASMA-CFP Convergence for the Development of Mali or CODEM Democratic Alliance for Peace or ADP-Maliba Movement for Mali or MPM Party for National Renewal (also Rebirth or Renaissance or PARENA) Rally for Mali or RPM Social Democratic Convention or CDS Union for Democracy and Development or UDD Union for Republic and Democracy or URD YΓ©lΓ©ma
Ambassador SΓ©kou BERTHE (since 16 September 2022)
2130 R Street NW, Washington, DC 20008
[1] (202) 332-2249
[1] (202) 332-6603
Administration@maliembassy.us https://www.maliembassy.us/
Ambassador Rachna KORHONEN (since 16 March 2023)
ACI 2000, Rue 243, (located off the Roi Bin Fahad Aziz Bridge west of the Bamako central district), Porte 297, Bamako
2050 Bamako Place, Washington DC 20521-2050
[223] 20-70-23-00
[223] 20-70-24-79
ACSBamako@state.gov https://ml.usembassy.gov/
ACP, AfDB, AU (suspended), CD, EITI (compliant country), FAO, FZ, G-77, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, ICCt, ICRM, IDA, IDB, IFAD, IFC, IFRCS, ILO, IMF, Interpol, IOC, IOM, IPU, ISO, ITSO, ITU, ITUC (NGOs), MIGA, MINUSCA, MONUSCO, NAM, OIC, OPCW, UN, UNCTAD, UNDP, UNESCO, UNFPA, UNHCR, UNIDO, UNOPS, UN Women, UNWTO, UPU, WADB (regional), WAEMU, World Bank Group, WCO, WFTU (NGOs), WHO, WIPO, WMO, WTO
22 September 1960 (from France)
Independence Day, 22 September (1960)
Description: three equal vertical bands of green (left side), yellow, and red history: uses the colors of the Pan-African movement
Great Mosque of Djenne
Green, yellow, red
"Le Mali" (Mali)
Seydou Badian KOUYATE/Banzoumana SISSOKO
Adopted 1962
4 (3 cultural, 1 mixed)
Old Towns of DjennΓ© (c); Timbuktu (c); Cliff of Bandiagara (Land of the Dogons) (m); Tomb of Askia (c)
πΉ Economyβ¬οΈ Top
Low-income Saharan economy; recession due to COVID-19 and political instability; extreme poverty; environmentally fragile; high public debt; agricultural and gold exporter; terrorism and warfare are common
$71.253 billion (2024 est.)
$67.857 billion (2023 est.)
$64.8 billion (2022 est.)
5% (2024 est.)
4.7% (2023 est.)
3.5% (2022 est.)
$2,900 (2024 est.)
$2,900 (2023 est.)
$2,800 (2022 est.)
$26.588 billion (2024 est.)
3.2% (2024 est.)
2.1% (2023 est.)
9.6% (2022 est.)
33.4% (2024 est.)
22.7% (2024 est.)
36.7% (2024 est.)
71.9% (2024 est.)
13.1% (2024 est.)
21.6% (2024 est.)
-0.7% (2024 est.)
22.5% (2024 est.)
-28.4% (2024 est.)
Maize, rice, millet, sorghum, onions, okra, sugarcane, cotton, mangoes/guavas, sweet potatoes (2023)
Food processing; construction; phosphate and gold mining
-2.4% (2024 est.)
9.126 million (2024 est.)
3.1% (2024 est.)
3% (2023 est.)
2.4% (2022 est.)
4% (2024 est.)
4% (2024 est.)
3.9% (2024 est.)
44.6% (2021 est.)
35.7 (2021 est.)
3.2% (2021 est.)
28.3% (2021 est.)
4.2% of GDP (2023 est.)
4.9% of GDP (2022 est.)
4.9% of GDP (2021 est.)
$2.841 billion (2020 est.)
$3.563 billion (2020 est.)
36% of GDP (2016 est.)
12% (of GDP) (2020 est.)
-$1.61 billion (2023 est.)
-$1.475 billion (2022 est.)
-$1.469 billion (2021 est.)
$6.13 billion (2023 est.)
$5.855 billion (2022 est.)
$5.381 billion (2021 est.)
UAE 73%, Switzerland 15%, Australia 5%, China 1%, Uganda 1% (2023)
Gold, cotton, oil seeds, fertilizers, gum resins (2023)
$8.066 billion (2023 est.)
$7.942 billion (2022 est.)
$7.596 billion (2021 est.)
Cote d'Ivoire 25%, Senegal 19%, China 12%, France 5%, Burkina Faso 4% (2023)
Refined petroleum, broadcasting equipment, cement, cotton fabric, plastic products (2023)
$4.085 billion (2023 est.)
Communaute Financiere Africaine francs (XOF) per US dollar -
606.345 (2024 est.)
606.57 (2023 est.)
623.76 (2022 est.)
554.531 (2021 est.)
575.586 (2020 est.)
β‘ Energyβ¬οΈ Top
53% (2022 est.)
99.7%
18.3%
1.222 million kW (2023 est.)
4.261 billion kWh (2023 est.)
661.63 million kWh (2023 est.)
880 million kWh (2023 est.)
320.616 million kWh (2023 est.)
57.3% of total installed capacity (2023 est.)
3.5% of total installed capacity (2023 est.)
37.6% of total installed capacity (2023 est.)
1.6% of total installed capacity (2023 est.)
36 metric tons (2023 est.)
46,000 bbl/day (2023 est.)
4.307 million Btu/person (2023 est.)
π‘ Communicationsβ¬οΈ Top
307,000 (2022 est.)
1 (2022 est.)
25.9 million (2022 est.)
112 (2022 est.)
National public TV broadcaster; 2 privately owned companies provide subscription services to foreign multi-channel TV packages; national public radio broadcaster supplemented by a large number of privately owned and community broadcast stations; transmissions of multiple international broadcasters are available (2019)
.ml
35% (2023 est.)
179,000 (2022 est.)
1 (2022 est.)
π Transportationβ¬οΈ Top
TZ, TT
30 (2025)
4 (2025)
593 km (2014)
593 km (2014) 1.000-m gauge
π‘οΈ Military and Securityβ¬οΈ Top
Malian Armed Forces (Forces ArmΓ©es Maliennes or FAMa): Army (lβArmΓ©e de Terre), Air Force (lβArmΓ©e de lβAir); National Guard (la Garde Nationale du Mali); National Gendarmerie of Mali (Gendarmerie Nationale du Mali) (2025)
4.3% of GDP (2024 est.)
4% of GDP (2023 est.)
3.5% of GDP (2022 est.)
3.4% of GDP (2021 est.)
3.4% of GDP (2020 est.)
Information varies; estimated 35-40,000 active FAMa, Gendarmerie, and National Guard (2025)
The FAMa's inventory includes mostly Soviet-era weapons and equipment along with smaller quantities of more modern material from a variety of suppliers, including France, Russia, South Africa, TΓΌrkiye, and the UAE (2025)
18 years of age for men and women for selective compulsory and voluntary military service; 24-month compulsory service obligation (2025)
The FAMa is responsible for the defense of the countryβs sovereignty and territory, but also has some domestic security duties, including the maintenance of public order and support to law enforcement; it also participates in socio-economic development projects; the military has traditionally played a large role in Maliβs politics; prior to the coup in August 2020 and military takeover in May 2021, it had intervened in the political arena at least five times since the country gained independence in 1960 (1968, 1976, 1978, 1991, 2012) the FAMa and other security forces are actively engaged in combat operations against several insurgent/terrorist groups affiliated with al-Qa'ida and the Islamic State of Iraq and ash-Sham (ISIS), as well as other armed rebel organizations, communal militias, and criminal bands spread across the central, northern, and southern regions of the country; a large portion of the country--up to 50% by some estimates--is outside of government control the FAMa and the remainder of the security forces collapsed in 2012 during the fighting against Tuareg rebels and Islamic militants and were rebuilt beginning in 2013 with external assistance from the EU and the UN; the UN Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali (MINUSMA) and the EU Training Mission in Mali (EUTM) ended their missions in 2023 and 2024, respectively; France intervened militarily in Mali in 2013 to assist with regaining the northern half of the country from rebel and Islamic militant groups; French troops withdrew in 2022; since 2021, Mali has increased security ties with Russia, which has provided equipment, training, and other forms of military support (2025)
π¨ Terrorismβ¬οΈ Top
Ansar al-Dine; Islamic State of Iraq and ash-Sham in the Greater Sahara (ISIS-GS); Jama'at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM); al-Mulathamun Battalion (al-Mourabitoun)
π Transnational Issuesβ¬οΈ Top
135,827 (2024 est.)
378,363 (2024 est.)
Source: Factbook JSON archive.