North
Mali prepares for war as refugees dream of liberation from al-Qaida
Displaced
Malians fear for the future as divisions deepen and more citizens
pick up arms to defend their homeland
31
October, 2012
Until
violence erupted in northern Mali, the Hotel Via Via had been on the
verge of expansion, scooping up tourists and business travellers who
not long ago congregated in Mopti – a bustling gateway between the
north and south, surrounded by the water of the Niger and Bani
rivers. Since al-Qaida-linked groups seized control of large swaths
of the north of the country, leaving Mopti on the frontline between
the government-controlled south and the Islamist-controlled north,
outside visitors have vanished, and so have the expansion plans.
Instead, the hotel's half-built wings provide a discreet location for
the Ganda Koya, a militia whose name means "son of the nation"
in the local Sonrai language.
As
dusk settled over the hotel, a group of the militia scuttled between
the building and a makeshift camp across the road where many rent
cheap accommodation. One of them, Fatou Sissiko – a pretty,
18-year-old girl wearing a low-cut sleeveless vest and African print
skirt – held a friend's baby girl on her arm as she talked quietly
and reluctantly about the atrocities she witnessed in her home town,
Gao, after it was taken over by the Islamist group the Movement for
Tawhid and Jihad in West Africa (Mujao) in March.
"I
left Gao because I want to fight to liberate the city," she
said. "I hated living under the Mujao. They are dangerous
people, they don't fear death. They killed many innocent people, I
saw it with my own eyes. They destroyed my school. Our parents send
us money so that we can stay in Mopti and learn to fight – they
support what we are doing."
Sissiko
is one of thousands of young people who have grown frustrated at the
failure of the Mali government – which was toppled by a coup on 22
March and has been replaced by a widely despised interim regime –
to protect its citizens in the north.
Despite
a United Nations security council resolution earlier this month
opening the door to military intervention to end al-Qaida's hold over
the northern region, residents have continued to flee.
An
estimated 35,000 internally displaced people, of whom 10,000 are
living in official camps, have arrived in the Mopti region alone
since the government lost control of northern Mali, one security
source told the Guardian.
Many,
like Sissiko, have joined militias, prompting fears that the ranks of
independent trained and armed northerners could create further
problems for the country.
Military
action – which an official source insists is being pursued
alongside the possibility of negotiations – is likely to begin in
the new year. But civilian authorities in Mopti are already gearing
up for war in the north, and are preparing emergency plans to merge
the police, gendarmerie, national guard and emergency services.
"Militia
members are in their thousands, and their numbers are multiplying,"
said the source. "I fear the impact of their existence on the
country – they are regional and ethnocentric organisations that can
only further divide Mali.
"If
people want to liberate the north they should integrate into the
national forces, otherwise it risks creating a whole new problem when
this war is over."
Despite
reports that the ranks of the Islamist groups – Mujao in Gao, Ansar
Dine in Kidal, and al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb in Timbuktu –
are filled by insurgents from neighbouring Algeria and Mauritania,
people from those towns say that their numbers have been bolstered by
Malians who have joined the groups as a means of survival.
In
a refugee camp next door to the Via Via, a slender man wearing
overalls sits slumped against the wall on a low bench. The makeshift
camp is another abandoned hotel, this one built as cheap overnight
accommodation for the drivers who once accompanied their affluent
employers on visits to Mopti. The long, single-storey buildings are
crowded with scores of half-dressed children, women pounding food for
the evening meal, and tents bearing the Swiss Red Cross logo.
Oumar
Cissé, 42, was a motorbike mechanic in Douanza – a town in the
Mopti region currently controlled by the Mujao – when Islamists,
including people he grew up with, began terrorising the local people.
"Ordinary
people I have known all my life, who I used to sit down and drink tea
with, joined the Islamists and killed their own neighbours,"
said Cissé. "I cannot join them – I just want to live a
normal life and educate my children. I fled here with my two wives
and 11 children."
Cissé,
a Bella – the ethnic name used for black Tuaregs – said
conditions in the camp were almost unbearable. He is one of the
minority of internally displaced people living in official government
accommodation, which he said was heavily overcrowded.
"Now
my sisters, who are teachers, have also joined us [in Mopti] because
the Mujao have closed all the schools in Douanza – they don't
believe in western education. During the rainy season we were 15
people sleeping in one room. We had to take it in turns to stand up
at night."
The
refugees said they welcomed plans for a military intervention to
reclaim the north, currently being drawn up in the capital city,
Bamako, by the Mali government, the Economic Community of West
African States and the African Union, with other international
support from the European Union and the US.
"I
am a simple man, I don't know about the details of who should do
what; all I know is that I want to go home and return to my normal
life, and if we do not have outside help this is not going to
happen," said Cissé.
A
security source, who asked not to be named, said that there were
concerns that Mopti – only 30 miles (50km) from the region where
al-Qaida-linked groups have held power since March – would be
destabilised by the absence of the armed forces, which have a major
base in the city. There are also fears that Islamist sleeper cells in
Mopti and other southern cities have the capability to launch
terrorist attacks.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.