Photo: Chris Simpson/IRIN/ Tuaregs discuss the future of northern Mali in Burkina Faso's Mentao camp
Source: IRIN
DJIBO, 19 May 2014 (IRIN) - Fighting has once again escalated in
northern Mali's Kidal region, with clashes between Tuareg separatists
and the army reportedly killing 36 people on 16 and 17 May. Despite the
failure of the 2012 rebellion in northern Mali and the loss of most of
the territory they briefly laid claim to, Tuareg separatists say the
fight for an independent territory of Azawad is not over. Activists from
the National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad (MNLA) now living as
refugees in neighbouring Burkina Faso say their original demands still
stand.
At 25, Alassane Mohamed Acheikh stands out among Tuareg refugees living
in the refugee camp at Mentao in northern Burkina Faso. Articulate and
passionate, he quickly dominates a meeting of camp residents aimed at
relaying refugee concerns to the outside world. But he speaks both as a
refugee and a self-proclaimed activist for the MNLA, hurriedly
correcting himself when he refers to “northern Mali”, instead of Azawad.
Interviewed in private, Acheikh talks of growing up hearing stories from
the rebellion of 1963, registering the brutal reprisals that came as
the Malian army’s counter-insurgency campaign tried to wipe out
resistance in the north.
“You will find adults here in these camps who were orphaned by that
conflict,” Acheikh points out. From his point of view, the MNLA decision
to stage an insurgency in January 2012 was fully justified by both past
events and the continuing discrimination of Tuareg communities.
“The international community needed to know what was going on,” Acheikh
argues. “There had been so many fake agreements, so many documents left
neglected in office drawers. The rebellion ensured the world paid
attention.
“My family disagreed with me,” Acheikh recalls. “I had relations who had
worked closely with the government. But they almost paid with their
lives for that misplaced trust. They now understand they were being
used. It was all a façade.”
From an older generation, Zouda Ag Doho, 52, a teacher from Gao, and
another MNLA sympathizer and refugee in Burkina Faso, talks heatedly of
past atrocities, including summary executions and mass rapes, and a
succession of broken promises. Ag Doho, was recently named president of
the refugees in the camp at Sag-Nioniogo camp, outside the capital
Ouagadougou. He says discussions on separatism, autonomy, or a new
confederal arrangement for Mali should not be outlawed, arguing that it
is the relatively new government in Bamako which has yet to offer any
ideas for the future of the north and is in danger of repeating all the
mistakes of the past.
“We are again into a cycle of rebellion and reprisal,” warns Ag Doho. He
has little hope in the government of President Ibrahim Boubacar (IBK)
and its ability to find a “definitive solution”.
He warns of past initiatives where development funds were squandered and
projects were put in the hands of Malians from the south. Ag Doho talks
with open contempt of the easy co-option and corruption of Tuaregs
drawn to Bamako to serve as MPs, civil servants, or even ministers.
Those arguments are strongly challenged in Bamako, both by the current
government and by Tuaregs who have made their own accommodation with the
Malian state and seen the MNLA as wrong-headed and dangerous.
In a recent interview with Afrique Magazine, President Ibrahim Boubacar
Keita talked of a minority holding back the peace process. Keita argued
that the key to peace in northern Mali was the will of different
communities to live together peacefully, stressing that the Tuaregs,
like other Malians, “have the right to feel at ease in their own
territory” and that the Tuaregs’ own civilisation should be considered
as part of Mali’s history and identity.
Ag Doho, a Christian, is adamant that part of the MNLA’s original
motivation was to confront a carefully calculated infiltration of the
north by mainly Algerian radical Islamists, exploiting the region’s
poverty, offering lucrative opportunities in drug-trafficking and other
criminal activities to a marginalized youth population. For Ag Doho, the
authorities were at best indifferent, at worst directly complicit in
allowing illicit networks to build up. The MNLA was ready to challenge
all that, “but did not have the power”. Ag Doho talks with contempt of
the role played by veteran Tuareg leader Iyad ag Ghali in creating Ansar
Dine as a foil to the MNLA, forging a disastrous alliance with groups
like Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and the Movement for Oneness
and Jihad in West Africa (MUJAO).
Despite the French military intervention and the reported dispersal of
Jihadist elements, Ag Doho says the movements have regrouped effectively
in areas like southern Libya, and can hold out against half-hearted
French-led clean-up operations.
MNLA supporters say the movement has been repeatedly misrepresented as
an exclusively Tuareg phenomenon, pointing to combatants, senior cadres
and even political prisoners from other ethnic groups.
“This is not a Tuareg problem; it is a problem for the whole of the
north,” Ag Doho argues. “There are no real divisions between the ethnic
communities in northern Mali, only those created by opportunist
outsiders who want to perpetuate the myth that the Tamasheq practise
slavery and have contempt for other Malians.”
Scepticism about MNLA motives
But some other Tuareg refugees are markedly more sceptical about the
MNLA’s identity and motivation. Mohamed, 39, a father of one from Gao,
who recently got out of the Sag-Nioniogo camp to find accommodation in
Ouagadougou, blames the rebellion for his predicament.
“I never supported the rebellion or the MNLA,” Mohamed explains. “I
still do not understand what they want. Never forget that there are many
different groups within the Tuaregs and some are simply working for
themselves”.
Mohamed says he has friends who support the movement, but is scathing
about the MNLA’s leadership and its indifference towards ordinary
refugees. Several senior MNLA figures are based in hotels, reportedly in
the up-market “new capital” district, Ouaga 2, their living conditions
extremely different from those experienced by refguees in areas like
Djibo and Sag-Nioniogo. “We seek them out, but they never come to us,”
Mohamed complains of the MNLA.
Mohamed also echoes a complaint often heard from non-Tuaregs in Bamako
that there is no clear-cut distinction between Jihadist and MNLA
fighters, and that alliances have been made and connections retained
that completely discredit the MNLA’s cause.
Suspicion, division
Mohamed Ahnou, a Tuareg from Niger living in Burkina Faso, has followed
the insurgencies in Mali and Niger over many years. A recent visitor to
the camp at Sag-Nioniogo, Ahnou says he was shocked by conditions and
the level of degradation refugees are exposed too. He says the MNLA has
yet to take on its responsibilities.
“Azawad is a dream,” Ahnou warns. “The Malian government could never
agree to it. The MNLA should have dropped Azawad, but now it is too
late.”
For Ahnou, MNLA rhetoric about promoting inter-communal harmony ignores a
much worsened climate of suspicion and division in the north. “This is
what the rebellion has done.” Ahnou warns that the poison runs too deep
for any peace agreement signed to carry much substance. He warns that
Niger, often cited as a success story, with a better-integrated Tuareg
community and a more focused administration, remains fragile, with the
threat of a future breakdown not to be discounted.
Ahnou warns that even the long-term future is bleak for Mali. “I can’t
see the north being put back together as it was many, many years ago”.