
Late on 9 December, the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MoFA) prohibited Emirati citizens from travelling to Mali and urged those already in the West African state to depart “as soon as possible.” The advisory cites rapidly deteriorating security conditions linked to escalating clashes between government forces and insurgent groups.
MoFA instructed nationals still in Mali to register with its 24-hour emergency hotline and to use the upgraded “Twajudi” app—which now features biometric check-ins and geofenced push alerts—to receive evacuation guidance. The UAE move follows similar warnings issued this week by France and Saudi Arabia and aligns with heightened insurer risk ratings for Malian airspace.
For companies and individuals trying to keep pace with such fluid restrictions, VisaHQ’s UAE portal (https://www.visahq.com/united-arab-emirates/) offers a single window for real-time travel advisories, visa requirement updates and document processing. By integrating its API into corporate booking tools, travel teams can receive instant alerts on policy changes like the Mali ban and automate compliance checks before any itinerary is approved.
For multinationals headquartered in the Emirates, the ban has immediate mobility implications. All staff travel for energy, mining and humanitarian projects must be suspended, and duty-of-care protocols activated for Emirati employees on the ground. Risk managers are advising companies to reposition crews to regional hubs such as Abidjan or Accra and to review med-evac coverage, which may be void if personnel ignore the ban.
Although the notice applies only to UAE citizens, MoFA “strongly recommends” that employers extend the same risk assessment to expatriate staff, highlighting a wider trend: travel advisories are increasingly being treated as de-facto corporate policy triggers rather than mere government guidance.
Practically, travel managers should update booking tools to flag the restriction and ensure that any trips to Mali are automatically declined. Firms with ongoing contracts in Bamako may need to renegotiate milestones or activate force-majeure clauses. The episode underscores the importance of integrating real-time government advisories into corporate travel approval workflows.
MoFA instructed nationals still in Mali to register with its 24-hour emergency hotline and to use the upgraded “Twajudi” app—which now features biometric check-ins and geofenced push alerts—to receive evacuation guidance. The UAE move follows similar warnings issued this week by France and Saudi Arabia and aligns with heightened insurer risk ratings for Malian airspace.
For companies and individuals trying to keep pace with such fluid restrictions, VisaHQ’s UAE portal (https://www.visahq.com/united-arab-emirates/) offers a single window for real-time travel advisories, visa requirement updates and document processing. By integrating its API into corporate booking tools, travel teams can receive instant alerts on policy changes like the Mali ban and automate compliance checks before any itinerary is approved.
For multinationals headquartered in the Emirates, the ban has immediate mobility implications. All staff travel for energy, mining and humanitarian projects must be suspended, and duty-of-care protocols activated for Emirati employees on the ground. Risk managers are advising companies to reposition crews to regional hubs such as Abidjan or Accra and to review med-evac coverage, which may be void if personnel ignore the ban.
Although the notice applies only to UAE citizens, MoFA “strongly recommends” that employers extend the same risk assessment to expatriate staff, highlighting a wider trend: travel advisories are increasingly being treated as de-facto corporate policy triggers rather than mere government guidance.
Practically, travel managers should update booking tools to flag the restriction and ensure that any trips to Mali are automatically declined. Firms with ongoing contracts in Bamako may need to renegotiate milestones or activate force-majeure clauses. The episode underscores the importance of integrating real-time government advisories into corporate travel approval workflows.










