Mali
rebels melt away in face of French advance
Majority
of northern region taken back but many refugees believe retreat of
jihadist fighters is only temporary
27
January, 2013
Just
two weeks after intervening in Mali, French troops, together with the
Malian army, have wrested back control of most of the north of the
country from Islamist rebels.
At
the weekend the French seized back Gao – under jihadist control
since last April – securing the airport and the bridge across the
Niger river. Thousands of residents turned out to celebrate, shouting
"Liberté!" and "Vive la France!" The French
suffered no losses with around a dozen "terrorists" killed,
the French defence ministry said. The rebels were said to have fled
on foot, or by camel, since there was no fuel.
At
the same time, a column of French troops were trundling serenely
towards Timbuktu, the remote Saharan town that has been a magnet for
the intrepid and the foolhardy since the 19th century. French and
Malian troops reached Timbuktu's gates on Saturday, army sources
said. The town's maze of mud-walled mosques and sand-blown streets
was deserted. Fighters from al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM)
that took Timbuktu last summer appeared to have left.
Elsewhere,
French jets pounded the mountainous rebel-held town of Kidal. Mokhtar
Belmokhtar, the AQIM commander behind the recent attack on the Amenas
gas facility in Algeria in which 37 workers were killed, is said to
be holed up there.
But
despite these swift successes, it is uncertain whether France's giddy
military advance will deliver any kind of lasting peace. So far the
"war" in Mali has involved little fighting. Instead
Islamist rebels have simply melted back into the civilian population,
or disappeared. Refugees who fled the rebels' advance believe it is
only a matter of time before the jihadists come creeping back. "The
rebels haven't gone far," Mohamad Miaga, a 28-year-old secondary
school teacher said. "They are in nearby villages."
Miaga,
who teaches English, fled his home in Gao last April. He now lives in
a refugee camp in the government-controlled town of Sevare, home to
around 4,000 refugees. French soldiers guard the nearby airport.
Last
year some "200-300 pickup trucks laden with fighters" swept
into Gao, he said, destroying buildings, including the town's food
security office, and firing randomly. When the rebels arrived,
several terrified residents jumped into wooden boats and escaped to
an island in the Niger. He left Gao two weeks later, as the price for
a ride out of town soared.
"The
rebels had big beards. They wore pantaloons. Their trousers didn't
quite reach their ankles. They were a mixture of foreigners and Mali
people," he noted. He added: "They imposed sharia law."
Some
of the jihadists were Tuareg, the lighter-skinned ethnic group who
have been waging a bitter on-off secessionist war in the north of
Mali for decades, and account for around 11% of the north's
population. The rebels who seized Gao came from the Movement for
Tawhid and Jihad in West Africa (MUJAO), a violent offshoot of AQIM.
At
least two other rebel factions are active in northern Mali. One, the
MNLA, is a Tuareg nationalist militia that fought the government but
is now seeking an alliance with the capital. Another is Ansar Eddine,
an Islamist group controlled by a former MNLA Tuareg leader, Iyad Ag
Ghali. It was Ansar Eddine that seized the central town of Konna on
January 10, prompting Paris, the former colonial power, to intervene.
France's
intervention in Mali, with 3,700 troops, has attracted broad
international support. Britain has offered logistical help and two
planes. One promptly broke down. The US has belatedly agreed to
refuel French jets.
Western
governments have treated the problem of growing Islamist extremism
across North Africa as one of "terrorism". David Cameron
has talked of an "existential struggle", warning it will
take decades to defeat.
But
in reality, the rebels' earlier successes had less to do with
hardline jihadist doctrine than with organised crime and drug
smuggling. There is strong evidence, moreover, of collusion between
the previous and possibly current Mali government and radical
Islamist groups.
In
recent years, western nations have secretly paid millions of dollars
in ransom to various Al-Qaida-allied factions for the release of
kidnapped nationals. Since 2008, around 50 westerners have been
abducted in the region. Eleven are still being held. The biggest
beneficiary of this lucrative industry has undoubtedly been AQIM.
It
is this western cash – $40m to $65m since 2008 – that has enabled
AQIM and other factions to capture the north. They bought weapons,
especially after the ousting of Muammar Gaddafi, and political
allies. The weapons facilitated their capture of Kidal, Gao and
Timbuktu; the Malian army fled in disarray.
These
shadowy groups have also reaped the rewards of another clandestine
business: drugs. One police officer showed the Guardian a photo taken
in Gao in 2008 of a warehouse stacked with neat rectangles of
cocaine. He estimated its value to be $40m. The most expensive area
of Gao, lined with colonial villas, is nicknamed "Cocainebougou"
– cocaine town. The officer – speaking anonymously – admitted
there was collusion between smugglers and state officials. He added:
"[The police] destroyed a small bag to show the public. I'm
wondering myself what happened to the rest."
Since
2005-7, South American drug cartels have been using west Africa as a
major transit route. Typically, the drugs arrive in small,
dysfunctional west African coastal states, such as Guinea or Guinea
Bissau, and are then shipped overland across the Sahel and Sahara to
Europe. The route goes through Morocco, Algeria and Libya, often
using ancient camel trails.
In
2009 a Boeing 727 landed near Tarkint, north of Gao, and got stuck in
the sand. According to the United Nations Office for Drug Control, it
was carrying up to 11 tonnes of cocaine. The traffickers collected
the cargo, then torched the plane, nicknamed "Air Cocaine".
Mali's president at the time, Amadou Toumani Touré, admitted that
drug revenues were fuelling Mali's spiralling insurgency.
Leaked
US diplomatic cables reveal Washington's increasing exasperation with
Touré's faltering government. They also complain about western
countries including Austria and Canada that secretly paid ransoms to
kidnappers. (The Swiss, by contrast, admitted publicly that they had
stumped up $5m to secure the release of one of their nationals.)
Prior
to the Islamists' northern takeover, the US had provided training for
the Malian army. During one visit, the head of the US's Africa
command, General William Ward, warned Touré that he needed to wrest
back control of his "undergoverned territory". Otherwise,
Mali would continue to give "free rein to arms and drugs
traffickers and terrorists", Ward said.
But
the White House's stern warnings went unheeded. US diplomats had
themselves figured out why. One cable noted: "It would be
difficult for the [Mali] government to fully pursue AQIM, as there
were a number of powerful and well-connected individuals who were
profiting from Al-Qaida's smuggling activities."
By
last year, events were running out of control. In March a group of
low-ranking army officers toppled the president in a coup, after
Tuareg rebels joined forces with the jihadists. Touré fled to
Senegal.
His
interim successor was badly hurt, when a mob stormed the presidential
palace. The Mali army failed to protect him, probably deliberately.
The country of 14 million, one of the poorest in the world, has yet
to return to democracy, with France now coming to the aid of an
unelected state.
Analysts
are scathing about the west's failures in Mali, which should be
offset against France's military success. "Western governments
have been playing an overwhelmingly negative role by paying ransoms
and supplying what is most likely AQIM's and MUJAO's most important
sources of financing," Wolfram Lacher noted in a September
report for the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
For
now, France is winning. But destroying a couple of AQIM bases and
driving the rebels from Mali's northern cities is the easy bit. The
challenge will be holding on to the territory against a nebulous and
cunning foe and, perhaps, somehow incorporating the rebels into a
lasting political solution. That won't be easy.
And
then there is the miserably unclear fate of the western hostages. The
11 include nationals from France, South Africa, Switzerland and
Sweden. All are tourists with a taste for adventure whose luck ran
out. "After the war, they [the rebels] have something very
important. They have the hostages," the police officer involved
in the successful 2009 rescue said. "They are the ultimate
bargaining card."
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