Photo: Anthony Morland/IRIN. Malian soldiers participate in training run by the EU
Source: IRIN
By Chris Simpson
BAMAKO, 17 February 2014 (IRIN) - Despite international efforts to
restore peace in Mali, the northern region of Kidal remains an MNLA
stronghold. While the rest of Mali slowly recovers from the rebel
takeover and Islamist occupation, officials worry the distrust and enmity lingering in Kidal could destabilize the country.
"Sandy" El Hadj Baba Haïdara, who has just lost his seat as the National
Assembly representative for Timbuktu, says Mali's destiny is tied up
with Kidal, a former garrison town in the remote Adrar des Ifoghas
region.
"You find people saying that Kidal is just a stone in the shoe, or a
thorn in the foot, but a thorn in the foot can damage the whole body,"
Haïdara argued. "Kidal has to be resolved. It will allow everyone to
breathe again, and then we can move on to the other things."
Military solution
Insecurity persists in the northeast. The Movement for Oneness and Jihad
in West Africa (MUJAO) this week announced it captured four
International Committee of the Red Cross staff and a veterinarian on the
road between Gao and Kidal.
The MNLA, whose members are from the Tuareg ethnic group, has denounced
such incidents in the past, arguing that part of its purpose was to push
Islamist militants out of the north.
Haïdara endorses a Malian military solution. Malian troops are present
in Kidal, along with troops from the UN's Stabilization Mission in Mali
(MINUSMA) and the French army. But there are not enough of them to
secure the vast area, say observers.
Increased presence in Kidal by the Malian army, promised before the
elections by interim President Dioncounda Traoré, never happened.
Despite the return of the governor to Kidal Region in July 2013 and the
MNLA's grudging handover of key buildings, the government's writ does
not run in Kidal.
MNLA warned a reporter in 2013, that "to plant a Malian flag in Kidal is an act of war".
Haïdara says the UN and French should step aside and let a strengthened
Malian army step in. These views are echoed by many politicians and
commentators in Bamako, the capital.
Turning against Paris
Although France's military intervention, staged in early 2013, helped
remove the country's Islamist occupiers, Malians' gratitude has
diminished in recent months.
It is increasingly argued in Bamako that, although the French forces
dislodged the Islamists from their strongholds in Timbuktu, Gao and
elsewhere, they adopted a "hands-off" approach when it came to Kidal.
The French troops worked with Chadian soldiers there, pointedly
excluding the Malian army.
France left the MNLA in place, hoping the group's knowledge of the
desert terrain would make it an ally in hostage negotiations and
military operations against the residual threat posed by jihadists.
Malians critics believe France was duped on both counts. They say the
French government sees as MNLA as an indigenous movement with legitimate
grievances while viewing the Islamists as opportunists mainly from
outside Mali - a distinction they say is wrong-headed.
"This is not the MNLA we had at the beginning," argued Haïdara. "Under
this flag you will find all the jihadists who lost their own battles."
Ali Nouhoum Diallo, former president of the National Assembly and
current head of COMODE, the Malian coalition of democratic
organisations, a broad-based alliance and parties and pressures groups
that have called for the liberation of Kidal, told IRIN:
"Up until now, I don't understand what France is really about when it
comes to the north," Diallo told IRIN. "If you are serious about the
protection of territorial integrity, you cannot let another flag fly in
Ardrar. To us, that is just incoherent."
Dealing with the MNLA
Diallo says he has watched with concern as the MNLA has kept the flag of
Azawad raised around Kidal, organized demonstrations against government
delegations and avoided talk of handover.
Previous rebellions and peace settlements have left many people
sceptical, says Diallo. He says separatist commanders have signed deals,
assuming senior civilian and military posts, only to later back further
insurgencies. Diallo says that to be taken seriously, the MNLA has to
disarm.
The MNLA has told intermediaries and reporters a very different story,
highlighting civilians killed by Malian security forces while
demonstrating, accusing France of leaving the movement exposed and
isolated in Kidal, and registering disappointment that current President
Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta, widely known by the initials IBK, has brought
nothing new to the table.
IBK is adamant that the north must be Mali's main priority. Since taking
office, he appointed Cheikh Oumar Diarra, former ambassador to the US,
as minister of national reconciliation and development of the northern
regions. He also convened a national court for northern Mali in Bamako
and established a revamped truth, justice and reconciliation commission
whose work is expected to focus on the origins of the crisis and the
abuses that came in its wake.
Losing momentum
But many fear the peace process has lost momentum.
The Ouagadougou Agreement of 18 June 2013 stipulated that an "inclusive
dialogue" should begin 60 days after the naming of a new government.
That has not happened.
Meanwhile, the MNLA and the government have accused each other of reneging on agreements on security arrangements in Kidal.
Observers point out the Ouagadougou Agreement is one of several,
including the 1992 National Pact and the 1996 Algiers Accords, to
attempt to bring peace to Kidal.
Mohamed Ag Ossade, director of the Tumast Tuareg Cultural Centre in
Bamako, says both sides have a responsibility to develop a settlement
that will not simply crumble after a couple of years. If the Ouagadougou
Agreement were to fail, he said, "that would be pointless".
Ag Ossade has been sceptical about the MNLA, arguing that its campaign
for an autonomous Azawad is backed by idealists and opportunists. But he
is equally wary of those calling for a military solution.
"Send the Malian army in and you would kill 90-year-old people or
two-year-old children. What is more, the army would be crushed. Everyone
there is MNLA," he said.
He is adamant that Mali can be a tolerant melting pot - if there is proper leadership.
Proving this point, he says, is the concert hosted by Tumast, featuring a
Tuareg band whose members mostly hail from Kidal. Tuareg audience
members share the dance floor with dignitaries, diplomats and music
enthusiasts of all races.
"We can get through all this," Ag Ossade tells IRIN. "But only if the
Malian government loves all its children and treats them equally."