Cape Argus

Libya the chief destabilis­ing nation in Sahel region – report

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LIBYA remains the main source of destabilis­ation of the Sahel countries and seems to have a presence across the region, according to a

report Tubu Trouble: State and Statelessn­ess in the Chad-Sudan-Libya Triangle.

The report, co-published by the Small Arms Survey think-tank, said a military solution would not solve the region’s problems.

The parties fighting each other in Libya needed to agree to make peace and a strong Libyan state needed to be re-establishe­d.

But the border states must also satisfy the needs of their minorities living in this border region to create long-term stability, the report said.

Libya’s instabilit­y, and the continuing violence in Darfur, Sudan were among the factors causing the internatio­nalisation and growing autonomy of armed factions in the region, according to the Libya Herald.

The new report noted that illicit weapons flowing from looted Libyan arsenals that had previously transited through northern Chad seemed to have dried up, but flow of individual weapons persisted and supplied the local market in northern Chad.

Easy access to Libyan weapons had further contribute­d to the militarisa­tion of Chadian Teda society.

Between 2011 and 2013, a series of gold discoverie­s in the Sahel and Sahara led to gold rushes in North Darfur and in Teda territory in Chad, Libya, and Niger.

New towns appeared in the desert on both sides of the border. Tankers delivered water from Libya, while food, generators, metal detectors, mercury and other mining equipment came mainly from Libya and Sudan. Access to gold mines in Libya was controlled by Libyan Teda militias.

Since government forces have long been seen as enemies by locals in the region and given the problems of policing such a large area, efforts to impose state control by military means would be an error of judgement, the report said.

Similarly, the Libyan crisis and the issue of a jihadist presence in the Sahara would not be resolved by a military interventi­on in southern Libya, or by placing Western soldiers along porous borders. – ANA

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