Photo: Crown Copyright. Insecurity in West Africa. Fostering development can help blunt extremist violence, observers say
Source: IRIN
DAKAR, 10 May 2013 (IRIN) - Academics and government, military and civil
society representatives gathered for a conference in the Senegalese
capital this week to assess the interplay between development and
violent extremism in West Africa, with some participants suggesting that
underdevelopment, marginalization and weak governance create a breeding
ground for militancy.
While local factors in West African and Sahel countries have contributed
to extremist violence, the rise of global jihad in the wake of the
US-led "war on terror" since 9/11 has also played a part in spreading
radical militancy in the region.
"In the Sahel, there is a combination of bad governance, poverty,
insecurity as well as several internal and external factors [that
contribute to extremist violence]," said Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah, head of
the Centre for Security Strategy in the Sahel and the Sahara, at the
opening of the 6-10 May Dakar conference.
"The Sahel has provided an ideal ground for extremist violence to take root and spread beyond national borders," he said.
The region has a history of instability. Since the first
post-independence coup in West Africa that toppled Togo's founding
president in 1963, it has seen a string of coups, some of which have
sparked civil wars.
West Africa is also one of the world's most impoverished regions despite
its natural resources. Seven West African countries occupy the bottom
10 places in the UN Human Development Index.
Poor political and resource governance have often led to explosions of
violence by disgruntled segments of society, and a number of studies have linked bad governance to insecurity in West Africa.
For example, Mali's Tuareg have been fighting perceived marginalization
by the central government and demanded an autonomous homeland in the
country's north. Following the March 2012 coup in the capital Bamako,
the Tuareg National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad seized towns
from government troops in the north, but was soon driven out by militant
Islamist groups.
Nigeria's increasingly violent Boko Haram militia, which wants an
Islamic state, should be seen as a reaction the government's entrenched
corruption, abusive security forces, strife between the disaffected
Muslim north and Christian south, and widening regional economic
disparity, according to the Council on Foreign Relations.
Some observers stress the local aspect. Militant Islam in Africa, while
linked to broader ideological currents, is mainly driven by the local
context, with Islamist groups emerging, evolving and reacting to
immediate local concerns, University of Florida's Terje Ostebo, argued
in a November 2012 paper published by the Africa Centre for Strategic Studies (ACSS).
"The Malian government's failure to consistently invest [in] and
maintain a strong state presence in the north. created an enabling
environment for the expansion of Islamic militancy and the escalation of
violence in this region," said Ostebo, an assistant professor at the
university's Centre for African Studies (ACSS) and the Department of
Religion.
Marginalization
"Poverty and underdevelopment and a sense of marginalization and
exclusion that comes from lack of governance, particularly at the local
level, are seen as drivers associated with violent extremism," Benjamin
Nickels, an assistant professor with the ACSS, told IRIN.
"Supporting development is a long-term approach to undermining drivers associated with violent extremism," he added.
"You do have a number of underlying factors that make certain regions
particularly vulnerable to violent extremism and extremist ideologies,
and then you have a number of factors that trigger violence. Amongst
these factors there is an underlying economic dimension that often gets
missed," said Raymond Gilpin, the ACSS academic dean.
Poverty, unemployment and socioeconomic deprivation partly explain the
rise of Islamist movements - violent and non-violent - argued Ostebo.
"There are other factors of extremist violence. However, it is easier
for militant groups to recruit unemployed youth who see no future for
themselves, than those who are in employment. The more young people are
able to be employed the less chances there are that they can be
recruited by militant groups," said Gilles Yabi of the International
Crisis Group.
"Development is part of the measures against extremist violence. But we
are already in a situation [in West Africa] where underdevelopment is so
deep that reversing it is very difficult," he told IRIN.
Ould-Abdallah cited other factors such as West Africa's wide
geographical area, weak public institutions and people's and
governments' loyalty to tribe and clan rather than the nation state as
also contributing to crime and extremist violence in the region.
In a bid to end insurgencies, Nigeria and Mali have attempted negotiated
settlements, but they have also resorted to the use of force, which is
limited in resolving the fundamental causes of rebellion. Repression by
governments or external forces can cause Islamist militants to fight for
their very existence and at the same time deepen perceptions of state
illegitimacy, Ostebo warned.
Spillover
The French-led intervention in Mali has dislodged the Islamist rebels
from their strongholds, but triggered fears that the fleeing militants
could destabilize
countries in the region from where they hail, target foreign nationals
in neighbouring countries and even win the sympathy of other extremist
militia.
The January attack on an Algerian gas plant is believed to have been in
retaliation for the French military drive in Mali. Nigerian troops
heading for Mali as part of an African intervention force came under
attack by Boko Haram-linked militants in January.
On 7 May, Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb posted a video message calling
for attacks on all French interests across the world for its
intervention in Mali.
Nigeria has teamed up with its neighbours to form a multi-national force to counter Boko Haram.
"The priority for Sahel right now is to help resolve the Mali crisis.
After Côte d'Ivoire, Liberia and Sierra Leone, West Africa does not need
another protracted crisis," said Ould-Abdallah.