Russia said on Tuesday it was important to quickly restore peace and stability in Mali where its forces are helping the military-led government battle insurgents who launched a series of weekend attacks near the capital Bamako and across the country.
Russian state media have said that Russia's Africa Corps, a paramilitary force that succeeded the former Wagner mercenary group, helped prevent a coup over the weekend and stopped the insurgents seizing key objects.
"We believe it is important that the country returns to a peaceful and stable situation as soon as possible," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.
Russian state media reported earlier on Tuesday that the Africa Corps had suffered unspecified casualties after it withdrew its forces from the town of Kidal following fierce fighting there at the weekend.
Asked whether the Kremlin had any information about Mali's president - Assimi Goita - who has not been seen or heard from since Saturday morning, Peskov said: "You should seek such information in Mali itself, not in the Kremlin."
Al Qaeda's affiliate in West Africa - JNIM - and Tuareg rebel groups claimed responsibility for the weekend assaults, in which the country's defence minister, who received military training in Russia, was killed.
Iran and the US have continued their attacks in the Gulf as each accused the other of violating an increasingly precarious interim deal signed less than two weeks ago to end their four-month-old war.
Ukraine hit two Russian oil refineries in the regions of Krasnodar and Yaroslavl overnight, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on Sunday, as Kyiv ramps up pressure on Russia's fuel supply with its drone fleet.
Australia said on Saturday it would double the maximum penalty it can impose on tech firms found to have failed to uphold a ground-breaking social media ban for children, as evidence mounts that the ban has had little effect on teen use.
A strong earthquake struck Afghanistan's Hindu Kush region on Saturday, the European Mediterranean Seismological Centre said, sending out tremors that could be felt from the capital Kabul across the border into neighbouring Pakistan.
Serbia's populist president Aleksandar Vucic, under pressure after months of anti-government protests, said on Saturday he will resign within weeks and the country will hold early presidential and parliamentary elections.