Photo: H.Caux/UNHCR. Malian refugee in Mangaize, northern Niger (file photo)
Source: IRIN
DAKAR, 18 February 2013 (IRIN) - Militant Islamists fleeing northern
Mali under pressure from French forces could undermine security in
neighbouring countries from where some of the fighters are believed to
hail. They could also attract the support of sympathetic militias in the
region, and even target countries with large expatriate communities,
analysts say.
Members of Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM - an extremist Islamist
group that emerged in the 1990s), its splinter faction the Movement for
Unity and Jihad in West Africa (MUJAO), and Ansar Dine (a Tuareg group
that sprung up in 2012), are believed to have retreated to Mali’s
mountainous region near the Algerian border.
However, their ability to carry out attacks outside Mali largely depends
on the strength of their networks abroad and the extent to which
military intervention (currently led by France and in which at least
eight West African countries are to take part), galvanizes opponents.
The extent of damage inflicted on these groups by French air power is unclear.
Since April 2012 conflict in the north has forced some 227,206 Malians
to become internally displaced and 167,245 to take refuge in
neighbouring Burkina Faso, Niger and Mauritania. The Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
estimates 4.3 million Malians will be in need of assistance this year,
but as of 13 February just $10 million of the $377 million appeal for
the country had been pledged.
Where are the rebels?
“It’s difficult to know where they are headed to, more so that they have
not completely left Mali. They would have first fled to the mountains
and then dispersed to other countries, but the fact that they are
carrying out attacks such as in Gao seems to suggest they are
maintaining a presence in Mali,” said Yvan Guichaoua, Sahel expert and
lecturer in international development at the University of East Anglia.
It is also not very clear how many fighters were and still remain in the
ranks of the Islamist groups, although Mali-watchers estimate that the
three groups had a force of around 3,000.
“So of that 3,000 probably at least half disappeared and went back to
their home as soon as the French began their assault. So maybe the
number has rapidly dwindled to 1,000 or less of pretty hard-core
Islamist fighters,” said Jeremy Keenan, a research associate at the
University of London's School of Oriental and African Studies.
Nevertheless Mali’s neighbours are still at risk of a spill-over from
the crisis, at least around the border areas, which remain porous,
argued Gilles Yabi of International Crisis Group.
“AQIM would withdraw towards the north using networks it has built in
Libya when trafficking. It could go as far as south of Tunisia where
there has recently been a huge weapons influx,” Guichaoua told IRIN.
“MUJAO, which has a more cosmopolitan composition, with fighters from
Niger, Nigeria, Moor people from Mauritania, [and] Saharawi people,
would rather withdraw to Niger or Mauritania. Nevertheless MUJAO is less
structured and could factionalize in accordance with the origins of its
members.”
The Moor and Saharawi are inhabitants of Africa’s westernmost region
around Morocco, western Algeria and Mauritania and have African and Arab
ancestry.
Independent armed groups could be galvanized into action by the foreign
intervention in Mali. “This is what happened in Algeria. While the
[January] attack on In Amenas [Algerian gas plant] had been organized a
long time ago, the conflict in northern Mali was used as a trigger. This
is also what happened when a branch of the Nigerian Islamist group Boko
Haram (called Jama'atu Ansarul Muslimina Fi Biladis Sudan) attacked Nigerian soldiers leaving for Mali in January,” Yabi explained.
Are foreigners at greater risk?
“In the short term, the military intervention increases the risks of
terrorist attacks. Furthermore, the first suicide bombing in Gao means
that asymmetric warfare that everybody dreaded has started. When you
have people ready to blow themselves up in northern Mali, you can't
exclude that they'll do it somewhere else,” added Yabi.
Countries with a huge population of foreigners like Senegal are at risk
of attack. Senegalese capital Dakar hosts dozens of international
organizations and tens of thousands of expatriates. “A bombing is a
stronger possibility now than before,” said Alex Thurston, a writer on
Sahel issues. In early February, Senegal arrested several foreigners suspected to be militants.
Expatriates in mining industries could also be targets. The January
announcement by France to deploy troops to Arlit uranium mine in Niger
illustrated the threat, observers say.
“Kidnapping risk is also still extremely high and that may spread. We
might see more of it - whether by opportunists or by some people who may
have some links to AQIM,” Thurston said.
“In the end a lot will depend on how the French, Malian and African
troops will behave. If the intervention turns sour with many human
rights violations, if northerners get excluded, it could generate huge
anger.”
Which countries are at higher risk and why?
Niger
Experts say Niger, Mali’s neighbour to the east, is the most vulnerable,
citing previous kidnapping of foreigners there and trafficking routes.
The capital Niamey is at risk because it is located on the
“Gao-Tillabéri axis [cross-border route] which is a corridor for
traffickers, jihadists and home to an Arab community which would be more
likely to link with former MUJAO fighters,” said Guichaoua.
The government of President Mahamadou Issoufou has, over the years,
tried to deal with internal threats by reaching agreements with Arab
leaders as well as addressing Tuareg grievances by giving them seats in
the government and pledging development of the country’s north. The
efforts have so far kept things stable, but the perception of
corruption, some unfulfilled development promises, and if the regime is
seen as being too open to Western military presence in the region, could
unsettle the fragile stability.
While Nigerien Tuareg youths are unhappy with the country’s leadership,
their anger has not boiled over into an uprising. Niger has seen Tuareg
demands for more autonomy over governance over recent years, but no
separatist movement per se. The demands have been more about equity in
terms of wealth distribution and jobs in the mining and public sectors,
Guichaoua said.
The Boko Haram insurgency across its southern border in Nigeria could also be a source of instability.
Algeria
“Algeria is a special case because AQIM is first an Algerian problem,”
said Yabi. While Algeria has always taken a tough stance against the
group, it has not managed to eradicate the threat. Some AQIM leaders
have always remained in Algeria and the group’s links with cells inside
the country still exist, analysts said.
“There is also evidence, but not really very verifiable yet, that some
of the leaders of the key Islamist groups have either been taken back to
Algeria or are trying to get back to Algeria. My suspicion is that most
of the AQIM leadership will be taken back in to Algeria because they
have been supported by Algeria,” said Keenan.
Libya
“Libya is an important terrorist pool in the region. Considering the
country’s instability, it is a breeding ground for fighters,” Yabi
noted. Ties between AQIM in northern Mali and and Libya have been built
up over years, mainly through trafficking. Dissident AQIM leader Mokhtar
Belmokhtar is said to have been key in forging the Libyan ties. He
claimed responsibility for the hostage-taking in Algeria’s In Amenas gas
field days after the French launched its military drive in Mali.
“Already there are reports of fighters from Mali dispersing throughout
the Sahel including back into Libya where some of these fighter came
from. Things could get pretty murky pretty quickly,” said Thurston.
Nigeria
Analysts IRIN spoke to said some Boko Haram elements were part of the
insurgency in northern Mali, but they doubted that the Nigerian
militants had structured links with the Islamist fighters in Mali. It is
also unclear what the effect returning Boko Haram fighters would have
on Nigeria.
“Boko Haram still has no international strategy. While some individuals
are moving and might eventually take action in Niger, the organization
still is very much a Nigerian movement that doesn’t act like a
globalized jihad group,” said Guichaoua.
Mauritania
Mauritania is one of the first countries in the region to face serious
terrorism threats. The government has cracked down on extremist Islamist
militants, adopting a counter-terrorism strategy which has received US
military backing as well as enhancing regional security cooperation.
“Mauritania has fought a good fight the last several years against AQIM
and it was coping well,” said Peter Pham of the United States-based
Atlantic Council think tank. There are fears that Mauritanian AQIM
elements returning to the country could link up with local gunmen,
Thurston said, adding that the Nouakchott authorities have arrested
suspected AQIM sympathizers.
Why are neighbouring countries wary of deals with Tuaregs?
Mali’s neighbours with Tuareg populations are wary of a political
settlement that could make concessions to the autonomy-seeking Tuaregs,
analysts said. Guichaoua explained that Algeria, for its part, has firm
control over its Tuareg population and has kept them happy enough not to
be swayed by events across the border.
In a recent interview with Andy Morgan, journalist and writer on West
African and the Sahel, the leader of the newly-formed Islamic Movement
of Azawad, Alghabass Ag Intalla, said: “We need to have a broad autonomy
for Azawad, a large autonomy, like that of the Kurds in Iraq or another
model.”
Mali’s Tuareg National Movement for Liberation of Azawad (MNLA) and the
Islamic Movement of Azawad (MIA), which recently split from Ansar Dine,
have expressed willingness to negotiate with the Bamako government.