Publications /
Opinion

Back
The Evolving Landscape in the Sahel: a Snapshot
June 9, 2016

Political Developments: Towards a Political Transition?

Countries in the Sahel are facing political changes that seriously affect the African continent at large. This blog attempts to give an overview of the recent political developments in the region before focusing on the ongoing challenges.

Starting 2011, Libya went through the Arab Spring protest leading to the current political deadlock. The escalation of violence combined with a rising death toll forced the international community to intervene on grounds of the Responsibility to protect. However, not thinking ahead of the intervention about Libya post-Kaddafi was one of the mistakes made by the international community. In fact, Kaddafi, the supreme guide, was embodying the State and his ousting led to total chaos in the country.

François Mauriac, a French novelist, wrote during the Cold War “I love Germany so much, I would love for there to be two”. For Libya’s lovers, ironically, the “good news” is that there are five. The country is currently fragmented and is controlled by five different polities, making the conflict-resolution difficult. Even more so that the official government only controls the east, a small province in the North West and the rest is beyond its control.

Morocco, in September 2015, hosted peace-talks in Skhirat under the auspices of the United Nations. It gathered Libya’s warring factions to reach an agreement aiming at forming a unity government and ending years of chaos in the country.

The Libyan crisis came with heavy consequences on countries like Mali, Niger, Nigeria and Mauritania. The conflict resulted in weapons and armed fighters flowing into northern Mali and helped fuel the extreme violence in the country. It also revived the Touareg rebellion, which triggered a military intervention by the Malian Government. It was followed by a military coup and the northern part of Mali was taken over by an armed islamist group which was demanding autonomy. In Mali, the situation is different and was characterized by a loss of state control starting January 2012, combined with an influx of islamist groups bearing arms and weapons.

Combined with the Azawad conflict, the whole country is still very fragile and divided between the North, (claimed by the Azawad in April 2012) and the South, controlled by the government. The Touaregs are also divided between rebels and Azawad partisans.

A few months later, in March 2012, the military carried out a coup d’état causing the takeover of the northern part of the country by islamists who were claiming their autonomy. As a consequence, the United Nations has put in place a new peacekeeping operation, the MINUSMA, in replacement of the MISMA, adding more African forces to the contingent. 

The conflict factions gathered in Algiers to negotiate a peace agreement and to discuss the status of the Azawad. After 8 months of tough negotiations, an agreement was signed. However, it was rejected by the CMA (Coordination of movements of Azawad) which gathers four movements, on the ground that the agreement did not recognize crimes committed by the Malian State since 1963 in the Azawad territory.

In parallel, Côte d’Ivoire was witnessing increased violence due to the controversy around the presidential elections. On the one hand, Laurent Gbagbo, in power for 10 years, claimed victory in the elections and on the other hand, Alassane Ouattara, alleged to be the newly elected president. This led to a civil war where the pro-Gbagbo and pro-Ouattara were fighting each other. In total, over a thousand civilians were killed.

Moving on to Nigeria, in the middle of the Saheli-region, it is also facing serious threats especially in its northern part. Boko Haram, an islamist armed group, which recently pledged allegiance to the self-named “Islamic State”, destabilized the country with several attacks. When President Muhammadu Buhari came into office in May 2015, his priority was ousting Boko Haram from the country. Almost a year later, the group’s attacks reduced on the Nigerian continent. The attacks went from 270 in 2015 to 36 in 2016. However, the group is still very active in the neighboring countries such as in Cameroon and Chad.

In Burkina Faso, the country slowly recovered from a political transition. Blaise Compaoré became president after overthrowing Thomas Sankara in 1987. He then tried to amend the Constitution to allow himself to run for a fourth term. However, after mass protests around the country, the vote was cancelled and Compaoré ousted.

Surrounded by vulnerable countries, Niger finds itself at the crossroads of the security equation. With Mali on the West, Chad on the East, Libya in the North and Nigeria in the south, the country has to fight extremists on all fronts. In addition, Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) constantly threatens to kidnap westerners in Niger, as it did in 2010 with some workers at Areva Niger.

Historical Vulnerability Faced with Violent Extremism

The Sahel region has a long history of vulnerability owing to dry land conditions, climate change as well as movements of people which resulted in setting up borders to establish new states. Those conditions add up to long periods of droughts, increasingly affecting population dependent on rain-fed agriculture. The rapidly growing population also plays a role in the Sahel’s human and food security. Malnutrition, extreme poverty and diseases are widespread in the region and lead to social insecurity. It is currently estimated that more than 17 million people are at risk of starvation in Western Sahel.

Natural resources, highly present in the region, attract the interest of both state and non-state foreign actors. Hence, Natural-resource-rich countries are often targets of strong competition when managing and exploiting their natural resources.

On the political side, the presence of nomadic people in a region where weak states have been created has exacerbated conflicts, particularly of ethnic nature. Furthermore, the fragility of states, especially in West Africa, made it difficult for governments to impose their sovereignty over their territories. Many of these territories are still out of the government’s control, which leaves room for extremist groups to proliferate. Those elements, combined with blurry state borders, resulted in a large number of people being internally displaced as well as refugees in the continent and outside of it.

Across the region, countries were facing violence caused by extremist groups up to now. In the Sahel, Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) is present and very active. It is organized around 4 katibat (main units) and consists of 60% of Touareg movements.

Against this background, jihadist groups proliferated in the region. After the Malian military coup in March 2012, al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) took over the northern part of the country together with two other jidhadist groups; the Movement for Unity and Jihad in West Africa (MUJAO) and Ansar Dine, a 5 years old Malian jihadist group. In January 2015, Mali witnessed the emergence of the Macina Liberation Front, an armed group disturbing the center of the country. The group aims at establishing an Islamic State in Mali and counts on its affiliation with Ansar Eddine to reach its goal. AQIM lately claimed responsibility over the Nampala attack on 5th of January, the Ténekou attack on the 16th of January as well as the Radisson Blu attack in Bamako on the 23rd of November. It conducts, almost on a daily basis, frequent attacks in northern Mali against civilians, members of the United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali (MINUSMA), members of the Red Cross, members of the Barkhane operation and the Malian army. In light of the group’s evolution, many are questioning if it is not becoming the Malian version of Boko Haram.

Nonetheless, Chad has a military hand in Central Africa and particularly in Northern Nigeria. With Nigeria’s consent, it conducted several operations targeting Boko Haram’s strategic positions. Its contingent counted around 5,000 soldiers considered amongst the most experienced fighters in the region. Such involvement demonstrates how the issue is becoming a regional one. Although President Buhari claimed to win the fight over Boko Haram, the heaviest operation wasn’t conducted by him. Chad joined forces with Cameroon and Niger in the fight against the militant group. The country also provided a handhold to the French armed forces in the region. 

Another issue that must not be ignored is urban terrorism. It exists through a system of allegiances pledged by autonomous groups to AQIM. Ansar Dine, a militant Islamist group in Mali, provides support to AQIM. In December 2015, another African jihadist group, Al-Mourabitoun, also pledged allegiance to AQIM. With its average of 150 fighters, Al-Mourabitoun is active in Algeria, Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire, Libya, Mali and Niger. The group operate autonomously through attacks, suicides and car bombings that mainly target westerns and aim at dragging media attention as well as getting ransoms.

In April 2016, the organization Islamic State weakened by the international coalition air strikes, moved the pivot towards Libya. Since the ousting of Kaddhafi in 2011, the country is still lacking a centralized government. This political gap allowed the Islamic State to have its new outpost in Libya. As part of its global strategy, it was hiding fighters amongst Syrian migrants and refugees to target Europe.

Since Boko Haram pledged allegiance to the Islamic State organization, which was approved in March 2015, it became the Islamic State’s Western Province. As a matter of fact, the organization gained ground in Western Africa. Furthermore, recruitment paths are multiplying, making up new roads for people wishing to join the Islamic State.

In 2016, the organization Islamic State was weakened by the international coalition air strikes. In the fight against terrorism and for the sake of stabilizing the Sahel, the institutional architecture relies on the G5 countries (consisting of Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania and Niger) and on the U.S. Africa Command. The latter also conducts military training in Africa and notably in Morocco.

Today, there are still many ideological divergences and rivalry between AQIM and the organization Islamic State. They are in competition for leadership in the jihadist world, in addition to their aim at destabilizing Muslim countries. However, if both organizations were to converge, it might become extremely difficult to dismantle their activities. 

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    January 20, 2021
    The self-declared Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic’s (SADR) declaration on the Guerguerat crisis, in November 2020, to terminate the 1991 ceasefire agreement and go to war with Morocco raises a problem regarding the legality of third States granting State recognition to the self-declared SADR. International law imposes an obligation on third States to not grant ‘premature recognition.’ Moreover, premature recognition would constitute illegal intervention in the internal affairs of t ...
  • Authors
    Céline PAJON
    January 8, 2021
    Durant  son  mandat  (2012-2020),  le  Premier  ministre  Shinzo  Abe  s’est évertué  à  démontrer  le  fort  intérêt  duJapon  pour  l’Afrique,s’engageant notamment sur un soutien financier d’un total de 60 milliards de dollars lors des sommets de la Tokyo International Conference on African Development(TICAD)  en  2013  et  2016  et  dévoilant  sa  vision  pour «un  Indo-Pacifiquelibre  et ouvert»(«Free  and  Open  Indo-Pacific»–FOIP)  lors  de  la TICADVI à Nairobi. Pour autant, ...
  • Authors
    Sabine Cessou
    January 4, 2021
    Mali, Niger, Burkina Faso… L’insécurité fait tache d’huile au Sahel, menaçant de s’étendre aux pays du Golfe de Guinée. Le terrorisme a entraîné la formation de milices d’auto-défense communautaires, et ainsi créé des « friches » sécuritaires dans tout le Sahel, du Bassin du lac Tchad à la région du Liptako-Gourma. Les budgets consacrés à la défense augmentent, contrairement à ceux qui soutiennent le capital humain, santé et éducation. Dans un contexte de croissance démographique so ...
  • Authors
    December 22, 2020
    “When I got home late that night, the house was dark and Michelle was already asleep. After taking a shower and going through a stack of mail, I slipped under the covers and began drifting off. In that luminal space between wakefulness and sleep, I imagined myself stepping toward a portal of some sort, a bright and cold and airless place, uninhabited and severed from the world. And behind me, out of the darkness, I heard a voice, sharp and clear, as if someone were right next to me, ...
  • December 16, 2020
    President Trump may not enact his threatened US drawdown of troops from the Sahel, but President Biden will still face pressure to end America’s “forever wars” and reduce the number of American lives and treasure lost to fighting terrorism in Africa. If the United States pulls back from...
  • December 14, 2020
    Foreign powers are grappling for influence across the African continent, but competition has been particularly fierce in the Red Sea. With Ethiopia, long viewed as a bulwark against instability in the Horn of Africa, emerging from conflict, there is a new opportunity to cement the peace...
  • Authors
    December 7, 2020
    The pandemic is accelerating history, in the sense that it is leading to the speeding up of some recent trends. In the case of globalization, the pandemic will not reverse it, but it will reshape it. Here we take a bird’s eye view of global trade during the pandemic, relate it to previous trends, and guess how global value chain managers and government trade policymakers are likely to react. A Bird’s Eye View of Global Trade during the Pandemic World trade took a deep dive during ...
  • November 27, 2020
    The Policy Center for the New South is hosting a joint webinar in partnership with the ASEANplus Platform of the Ghent University under the theme “Europe, Africa and Asia: What Partnership Dynamics after 2021?”. The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the effects of globalization and defi...
  • November 27, 2020
    The Policy Center for the New South is hosting a joint webinar in partnership with the ASEANplus Platform of the Ghent University under the theme “Europe, Africa and Asia: What Partnership Dynamics after 2021?”. The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the effects of globalization and defi...
  • Authors
    Sabine Cessou
    November 27, 2020
    « Une terre promise » (Fayard), livre événement de Barack Obama, couvre sa campagne et les trois premières années de sa présidence. L’Egypte est le pays d’Afrique dont il parle le plus – et pas seulement à cause du Printemps arabe. L’Afrique occupe à peine 40 pages sur les 840 que comptent les mémoires de Barack Obama. La crise financière internationale, la loi Obama Care et le retrait des troupes d’Irak et Afghanistan ont retenu l’attention du président fraîchement élu. C’est l’Eg ...