Rantburg

Today's Front Page   View All of Tue 04/16/2024 View Mon 04/15/2024 View Sun 04/14/2024 View Sat 04/13/2024 View Fri 04/12/2024 View Thu 04/11/2024 View Wed 04/10/2024
2019-05-30 Africa North
Crisis Group Urges 'Dialogue' between Mali Government, Jihadists
[AnNahar] Mali's government should consider "dialogue" with jihadists waging an insurgency in the west African state, the International Crisis Group (ICG) think tank suggested Tuesday, an idea promptly rejected by Bamako.

The idea of talking to jihadists may seem ludicrous to some, said the ICG, but insisted all avenues should be explored to protect civilians reeling from inter-communal violence in central Mali, fuelled by the Islamist revolt.

In a report, the ICG did not suggest halting military operations against Katiba Macina, the gang of radical Islamist preacher Amadou Koufa behind a four-year-old insurgency.

Continued from Page 2



But it recommended "a shift of tack, with force used alongside efforts to bring Katiba Macina leaders to the table", adding that prospects of defeating the movement on the battlefield were "remote."

However,
we can't all be heroes. Somebody has to sit on the curb and applaud when they go by...
a government official, speaking on condition of anonymity
... for fear of being murdered...
, told AFP that "the official line... for the moment is not to discuss with them."

This reflected a statement by Mali's Foreign Minister Tiebile Drame, who told Radio La Belle France International on a visit to Gay Paree last week: "The line of the Malian state is that there is no dialogue envisaged with those to whom you refer."

The ICG report, entitled "Speaking with the 'Bad Guys': Towards dialogue with central Mali's jihadists," said previous contacts had "revealed a degree of pragmatism among Katiba Macina Death Eaters, suggesting that even if the odds are stacked against success, dialogue with the group is worth trying."

An independent group that proposes solutions to conflicts, the ICG acknowledged the idea of talking with jihadists could outrage "some Bamako elites" and may be seen as a step toward a deal and Sharia rule.

Foreign powers, in turn, "might see it as legitimising a terrorist outfit with blood on its hands," the report added.

However,
"war between the state and jihadists in central Mali has led to growing intercommunal violence," the ICG said.

"To spare civilians additional harm, the government should explore the possibility of talks with the turbans about local ceasefires and humanitarian aid."

The government in Bamako "should empower religious leaders to explore initial talks" with jihadist leaders and also seek dialogue among central Malians, "including those sympathetic to the insurgency," the report suggested.

- FULANI VS DOGON -
To make such talks more palatable to Malian authorities and Western allies such as La Belle France, which has intervened militarily to combat Islamists, jihadist forces should be compelled to renounce ties to transnational movements such as al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb.

Delegates to a national conference in 2017 called for the opening of talks with Amadou Koufa and radical Tuareg leader Iyad Ag Ghaly, but the resolution was rejected by the Malian and French governments.

Amadou Koufa in March 2017 joined the newly-formed Group to Support Islam and Moslems (GSIM), which was born of a merger to become the leading jihadist alliance in the Sahel region
... North Africa's answer to the Pak tribal areas...
with links to al-Qaeda. Iyad Ag Ghaly is its leader.

This group, Drame said last week, "has contributed to shedding a lot of blood, too much blood, these last years."

Since the appearance of Koufa's movement, recruited mainly among his own Fulani (Peul) community, communal violence has spread in central Mali, a mosaic of ethnic groups.

Fulani people, who are traditionally cattle-breeders, have confronted the Bambara and Dogon communities of settled farmers and hunters, who in turn have created "self-defence militias".

In an kaboom of violence on March 23, about 160 Fulani villagers were slaughtered at Ogossagou, near the border with Burkina Faso
...The country in west Africa that they put where Upper Volta used to be. Its capital is Oogadooga, or something like that. Its president is currently Blaise Compaoré, who took office in 1987 and will leave office feet first, one way or the other...
, by suspected Dogon hunters.

The U.N. mission in Mali (MINUSMA) announced on May 16 it had recorded "at least 488 deaths" since January 2018 in attacks by "traditional hunters against civilians of the Peul population" in the central Mopti and Segou regions.

Over the same period, armed Fulanis "caused 63 deaths" among civilians in the Mopti region, MINUSMA said.
Posted by trailing wife 2019-05-30 00:00|| || Front Page|| [10 views ]  Top

13:45 magpie
13:37 NoMoreBS
13:35 Beldar+Uneter3543
13:24 SteveS
13:23 NoMoreBS
13:19 Jack Salami
13:13 Beldar+Uneter3543
13:02 NoMoreBS
13:01 mossomo
13:00 mossomo
12:54 mossomo
12:52 mossomo
12:50 mossomo
12:42 SteveS
12:31 Procopius2k
12:29 Grom the Reflective
12:24 swksvolFF
12:23 mossomo
12:21 mossomo
12:20 Beldar+Uneter3543
12:18 Skidmark
12:16 Grom the Reflective
12:14 Silentbrick
12:09 Procopius2k









Paypal:
Google
Search WWW Search rantburg.com