Kuwait Times

Why Niger, Mali’s cattle herders turned to jihad

Arms, conflict opened door to Qaeda, then Islamic State

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NIAMEY: When Doundou Chefou first took up arms as a youth a decade ago, it was for the same reason as many other ethnic Fulani herders along the Niger-Mali border: to protect his livestock. He had nothing against the Republic of Niger, let alone the United States of America. His quarrel was with rival Tuareg cattle raiders. Yet on Oct 4 this year, he led dozens of militants allied to Islamic State in a deadly assault against allied US-Niger forces, killing four soldiers from each nation and demonstrat­ing how dangerous the West’s mission in the Sahel has become.

The incident sparked calls in Washington for public hearings into the presence of US troops. A Pentagon probe is due to be completed in January. Asked by Reuters to talk about Chefou, Nigerien Defense Minister Kalla Mountari’s face fell. “He is a terrorist, a bandit, someone who intends to harm to Niger,” he said at his office in the Nigerien capital Niamey earlier this month. “We are tracking him, we are seeking him out, and if he ever sets foot in Niger again he will be neutralize­d.”

Like most gunmen in so-called Islamic State in the Greater Sahara, which operates along the sand-swept borderland­s where Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso meet, Chefou used to be an ordinary Fulani pastoralis­t with little interest in jihad, several government sources with knowledge of the matter said. The transition of Chefou and men like him from vigilantes protecting their cows to jihadists capable of carrying out complex attacks is a story Western powers would do well to heed, as their pursuit of violent extremism in West Africa becomes ever more enmeshed in long-standing ethnic and clan conflicts.

For now, analysts say the local IS affiliate remains small, at fewer than 80 fighters. But that was also the case at first with Al-Qaeda-linked factions before they tapped into local grievances to expand their influence in Mali in 2012. The United Nations this week released a report showing how IS in northern Somalia has grown to around 200 fighters from just a few dozen last year. The US military has ramped up its presence in Niger, and other neighborin­g countries, in recent years as it fears poverty, corruption and weak states mean the region is ripe for the spread of extremist groups.

Herders face tough, insecure life on the Sahel borderland­s

Genesis of a jihad

For centuries the Tuareg and Fulani have lived as nomads herding animals and trading - Tuareg mostly across the dunes and oases of the Sahara and the Fulani mostly in the Sahel, a vast band of semi-arid scrubland that stretches from Senegal to Sudan beneath it. Some have managed to become relatively wealthy, accumulati­ng vast herds. But they have always stayed separate from the modern nation-states that have formed around them. Though they largely lived peacefully side-by-side, arguments occasional­ly flared, usually over scarce watering points. A steady increase in the availabili­ty of automatic weapons over the years has made the rivalry ever more deadly.

A turning point was the Western-backed ouster of Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi in 2011. With his demise, many Tuareg from the region who had fought as mercenarie­s for Gaddafi returned home, bringing with them the contents of Libya’s looted armouries. Some of the returnees launched a rebellion in Mali to try to create a breakaway Tuareg state in the desert north, a movement that was soon hijacked by Al Qaeda-linked jihadists who had been operating in Mali for years. Until then, Islamists in Mali had been recruiting and raising funds through kidnapping. In 2012, they swept across northern Mali, seizing key towns and prompting a French interventi­on that pushed them back in 2013.

Amid the violence and chaos, some of the Tuareg turned their guns on their rivals from other ethnic groups like the Fulani, who then went to the Islamists for arms and training. In November 2013, a young Nigerien Fulani had a row with a Tuareg chief over money. The old man thrashed him and chased him away, recalls Boubacar Diallo, head of an associatio­n for Fulani livestock breeders along the Mali border, who now lives in Niamey. The youth came back armed with an AK-47, killed the chief and wounded his wife, then fled. The victim happened to be the uncle of a powerful Malian warlord. Over the next week, heavily armed Tuareg slaughtere­d 46 Fulani in revenge attacks along the Mali-Niger border.

The incident was bloodiest attack on record in the area, said Diallo, who has documented dozens of attacks by Tuareg raiders that have killed hundreds of people and led to thousands of cows and hundreds of camels being stolen. “That was a point when the Fulani in that area realized they needed more weapons to defend themselves,” said Diallo, who has represente­d them in talks aimed at easing communal tensions. The crimes were almost never investigat­ed by police, admits a Niamey-based law enforcemen­t official with knowledge of them. “The Tuareg were armed and were pillaging the Fulani’s cattle,” Niger Interior Minister Mohamed Bazoum said. “The Fulani felt obliged to arm themselves.” ‘Self-defense’

Gandou Zakaria, a researcher of mixed TuaregFula­ni heritage in the faculty of law at Niamey University, has spent years studying why youths turned to jihad. “Religious belief was at the bottom of their list of concerns,” he told Reuters. Instead, local grievances were the main driving force. Whereas Tuareg in Mali and Niger have dreamed of and sometimes fought for an independen­t state, Fulani have generally been more pre-occupied by concerns over the security of their community and the herds they depend on. “For the Fulani, it was a sense of injustice, of exclusion, of discrimina­tion, and a need for self-defense,” Zakaria said. One militant who proved particular­ly good at tapping into this dissatisfa­ction was Adnan Abu Walid AlSahrawi, an Arabic-speaking north African, several law enforcemen­t sources said.

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 ??  ?? Photo shows a convoy of Malian military vehicles of the Malian Forces taking part in the ‘Hawbi’ joint tactical coordinati­on operation with soldiers of France’s Barkhane mission. The world’s newest joint internatio­nal force, the five-nation G5 Sahel plans to number up to 5,000 military, police and civilian troops by March 2018.
Photo shows a convoy of Malian military vehicles of the Malian Forces taking part in the ‘Hawbi’ joint tactical coordinati­on operation with soldiers of France’s Barkhane mission. The world’s newest joint internatio­nal force, the five-nation G5 Sahel plans to number up to 5,000 military, police and civilian troops by March 2018.
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