Funeral repatriation route guide
Repatriation from Mali to United Kingdom
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Quick answer
Repatriation from Mali to the United Kingdom: what to expect
Mali presents some of the most serious challenges of any repatriation origin for families in the UK. The FCDO advises against all travel to Mali due to the security situation (gov.uk, 2026). The British Embassy in Bamako operates with reduced staff. Air connections outside the capital are extremely limited. All official documentation is in French and requires certified English translation. Families should contact the FCDO emergency line immediately and engage a specialist repatriation coordinator with West Africa experience on the day of death.
- Key document: acte de deces (état civil), in French, requiring certified English translation
- FCDO advises against all travel to Mali (gov.uk, 2026). The security situation significantly affects access and timelines.
- British Embassy Bamako has reduced operations. Contact via FCDO emergency line: +44 (0)20 7008 5000
- Documentation takes 21-42 days in most cases
- Very limited air connections outside Bamako. Most routes connect via Casablanca, Paris, or Dakar.
- Cremation facilities are extremely limited. Specialist advice is needed from the outset.
The process
What happens after a death in Mali
Call 17 (police) or 15 (ambulance) if it is safe to do so. Deaths are registered through the local état civil office, which issues the acte de deces in French. All documentation requires certified English translation before UK authorities will accept it. Where a death is violent, suspicious, or unexplained, the Gendarmerie Nationale takes jurisdiction and a post-mortem will be required. The security situation in Mali means that access to parts of the country may be severely restricted or impossible, and the movement of both personnel and human remains can be delayed by security constraints entirely outside the family's or coordinator's control. The British Embassy in Bamako operates with reduced staff and cannot provide the full range of consular services. FCDO travel advice for Mali (gov.uk, 2026) should be read carefully as a first step.
Step by step
Timeline: Mali to United Kingdom
Contact the FCDO emergency line immediately. Assess safety of the situation before any other steps.
Day of death. FCDO 24hr: +44 (0)20 7008 5000.
Family or travel insurer
Death registered with the local état civil office. Acte de deces obtained in French.
Days 1-7. Access to civil registration may be affected by local conditions.
Local contacts and repatriation specialist
British Embassy Bamako notified. Consular case opened with reduced-operations embassy.
Simultaneous with Step 1. Embassy advises on what assistance is available.
Family or repatriation specialist
Post-mortem completed if required by Gendarmerie Nationale. Body released.
Variable: this stage is highly dependent on local security conditions and access.
Gendarmerie Nationale and medical authorities
Embalming and preparation by a local funeral director where available.
After body is released. Facilities are limited outside Bamako.
Local funeral director and repatriation specialist
Full documentation set assembled. Certified English translations prepared. Export permit obtained.
Allow 21-42 days in total. Cannot begin until death certificate is issued.
Repatriation specialist
Air cargo from Bamako via Casablanca, Paris, or Dakar to the United Kingdom.
Once all documentation is complete and cargo is accessible.
Repatriation specialist and airline cargo
UK funeral director takes custody at the cargo terminal. Coroner notified.
Within 24 hours of arrival in the UK.
Receiving UK funeral director
In United Kingdom
When the body arrives in United Kingdom
The UK funeral director takes custody at the cargo terminal. All documentation must be in certified English translation. The coroner for the district is notified. Straightforward cases proceed directly to funeral arrangements.
Consular support
FCDO 24-hour emergency line: +44 (0)20 7008 5000. The British Embassy in Bamako has reduced operations due to the security situation. They can advise but cannot fund or arrange repatriation.
Common questions
FAQs: repatriation from Mali to United Kingdom
The FCDO advises against all travel to Mali. In the most favourable circumstances, where the death occurs in Bamako and security conditions do not prevent access, 6-8 weeks is possible. Most cases take 8-12 weeks. Where security conditions cause delays or a post-mortem is required, timelines can extend to 16 weeks or more.
It means the UK government considers Mali unsafe for British nationals and cannot guarantee the safety of personnel trying to assist. Repatriation remains possible in many cases, but the security situation can delay access to remain, restrict movement of personnel, and limit the cooperation of local authorities. A specialist coordinator with West Africa experience is essential.
The British Embassy in Bamako operates with reduced staff due to the security situation and cannot offer the full range of consular services. They can provide guidance on what is possible and register the death with UK authorities where they are able. The FCDO 24-hour emergency line (+44 (0)20 7008 5000) should be your first contact.
The core documents are: the acte de deces (certified English translation), post-mortem report where required, embalming certificate, freedom from infection certificate, and export permit. All documents originate in French. Your repatriation coordinator manages the whole process on your behalf.
Cremation facilities are extremely limited in Mali. This is not a practical option in most cases. Full body repatriation is the standard approach. Your repatriation specialist can advise on what is feasible given current conditions.
Mali's main airport is Modibo Keita International Airport in Bamako. Connections to the UK are typically via Casablanca, Paris, or Dakar. Security conditions and airline operations can affect routing and availability.
The UK funeral director takes custody at the cargo terminal. All documentation must be in certified English translation. The coroner for the district is notified. Straightforward cases proceed directly to funeral arrangements.
Related guides
More repatriation guidance
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Reviewed by the Repatriate Service editorial team. Information sourced from UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) guidance, official embassy contacts, and professional repatriation experience. Updated June 2026.
Sources: FCDO gov.uk · Mali repatriation guide · Frequently asked questions