
Situation Summary
Senegal remains a relatively stable West African state (global threat rank #null; composite score 21) with localized security pressures concentrated in the Tambacounda Region (risk 31.3), which borders Mali and experiences cross-border militant spillover. The security environment has shifted markedly following the closure of France's last military bases in June 2026, altering the regional strategic posture. Current risk is driven primarily by cyber-extortion against state institutions and ongoing monitoring of Sahel instability rather than active civil unrest or large-scale violence within Senegal's borders.
Key Developments
- Dakar – La Cour des Comptes ransomware attack (17 June 2026): Ransomware group Krybit publicly claimed compromise of Senegal's supreme audit institution, threatening data leak unless negotiations commence. Claimed exfiltration includes sensitive internal documents and personal data.
- Dakar – Government cyber-extortion risk elevation (17–18 June 2026): Threat intelligence assesses that additional Senegalese public-sector entities face heightened risk of data-theft and extortion operations in the near term, extending beyond the initial court compromise.
- Nationwide – E-government service disruption risk (17–18 June 2026): Ransomware threat to audit and financial-oversight systems raises risk of short-notice access restrictions or shutdowns during incident response, potentially affecting government digital services accessed across the country.
- Dakar – Political-sensitivity and information-environment risk (17–18 June 2026): Compromise of La Cour des Comptes creates conditions for selective data leaks to fuel online disinformation about state finances, increasing reputational and political-tension risk in the capital.
- Regional – Sahel spillover monitoring (18 June 2026): Dakar-based media coverage of the 18 June attack on Niamey airport (Niger) reflects Senegalese authorities' ongoing concern about cross-border militant activity and regional air-travel security.
- National – Post-base-closure strategic shift (18 June 2026): President Bassirou Diomaye Faye's stated readiness to lead regional reconciliation efforts, coupled with closure of France's military bases, signals shifting security architecture and foreign-military presence with implications for strategic-risk assessment.
Highest-Risk Areas
Tambacounda Region (31.3) dominates sub-national risk and reflects persistent cross-border threats from Mali, including militant infiltration and unconventional violence. Dakar Region (6.6), though significantly lower, has emerged as a near-term cyber and governance risk due to the La Cour des Comptes incident and associated threats to national institutions. All other regions (1.3 each) show minimal indexed risk. Tambacounda's risk profile reflects the reality of Sahel instability; Dakar's recent elevation reflects the cyber-extortion campaign and political sensitivity surrounding state audit and financial-oversight functions.
How GeoBit Would Assist
Security teams should employ AOI Monitoring & Early Warning to track Tambacounda and border areas for militant activity; Intel Sweep and multi-language OSINT to monitor cyber-threat forums and social media for follow-on ransom claims or data-leak announcements affecting Senegalese institutions; and Sentiment & Temporal Analysis on Dakar media and online discourse to detect disinformation campaigns or political escalation tied to potential data releases. Network & Actor Analysis can map Krybit's operational patterns and identify other Senegalese targets at risk.
7-Day Outlook
The Krybit ransomware incident is likely to remain active over the next 7 days as negotiation windows open and threat actors assess willingness to pay or escalate. Increased cyber vigilance across Senegalese government and critical infrastructure is expected. Tambacounda and the broader Sahel security environment will continue to drive baseline risk, with potential for regional spillover if militant activity in Mali intensifies.
Highest-Risk Areas — Ranked
| # | State / Region | Risk |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Tambacounda Region | 31.3 |
| 2 | Dakar Region | 6.6 |
| 3 | Louga Region | 1.3 |
| 4 | Thiès Region | 1.3 |
| 5 | Fatick Region | 1.3 |
| 6 | Diourbel Region | 1.3 |
| 7 | Kaolack Region | 1.3 |
| 8 | Saint-Louis Region | 1.3 |
| 9 | Kaffrine Region | 1.3 |
| 10 | Ziguinchor Region | 1.3 |
| 11 | Sédhiou Region | 1.3 |
| 12 | Kolda Region | 1.3 |
Sources
Previous Daily Briefs
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