The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Can the Sahel recapture its lost glory?

- Tom Collins Correspond­ent Read the full article on www. herald.co.zw

Today the vast Sahel region, lying between North and sub-Saharan Africa, is characteri­sed by general poverty, lawlessnes­s and the presence of terrorist groups. But it once formed one of the world’s busiest and wealthiest trading routes. Can the fortunes of this region be revived and restored to their long-lost glory?

ACROSS much of West Africa a trend has developed. As the Atlantic Ocean feeds the economic powerhouse­s on the coast, the Sahara has given way to instabilit­y, contraband and disrepair. This wasn’t always the case. In fact, the very opposite was true.

Transit routes criss-crossing the desert connected once-powerful cities like Timbuktu, Gao, Djenné and Kano with North Africa and the Middle East. Goods like gold, salt, cotton, leather and ostrich feathers were transporte­d and traded in large caravans and it was the interior that flourished.

Mansa Musa, 14th-century ruler of the Mali Empire, is widely considered as the richest person ever to have lived. Indeed, the fortunes of great and powerful empires like Songhai, Mali and Kanem-Bornu, among others, ebbed and flowed with the idiosyncra­sies of the trade.

In the present day much has changed. The trade declined due to factors including the arrival of European colonialis­m, which prompted the movement of goods towards the coast, instead of through the Sahara. Supply chains were disrupted and the trans-Saharan trade and the cities it once supported began their decline.

Now, policy-makers based in the south are at odds over what to do with the rising lawlessnes­s of the Sahel. Security imperative­s frequently trump developmen­t and strategy is muddled in the absence of any panacea.

Yet how could a better understand­ing of the Sahel’s economic history have a positive influence on developmen­tal policy in the region? What, if anything, remain of the old trade routes? And how could they be re-establishe­d?

The trade and its decline

While the Sahara has always cradled robust internal trade, the peak of the activity was from between the eighth to 17th centuries. Over this time period the nature of the trade took many different forms. “In terms of the peoples and goods involved, they shifted across time and space,” explains Ghislaine Lydon, Associate Professor in the Department of History at the University of California, Los Angeles. A few goods and locations, however, were key.

Up until the 18th and 19th centuries, gold was traded heavily, reveals Lydon. Muslim and Jewish traders in North Africa would invest in camel caravans heading south to places like Timbuktu to exchange European goods for gold. Prior to this the Gao empire was recorded as trading gold, precious stones, animal hides and enslaved Africans across the Sahara to Egypt.

Cotton and leather were also important commoditie­s. Kano, in north-eastern Nigeria, was the centre of such commerce. “Kano was a major centre in indigo dying and that kind of cloth was valued greatly in the northern Moroccan markets,” says Lydon.

“Moroccan sultans would wear indigo died cloth as regalia but it was also important within the Saharan oases for nomadic peoples building tents and the like.”

Indeed, Moroccan port-towns like Essaouira got rich as exchange points between West African and European markets. Moroccan leather, as it was known and used in Spain for paper production, was in fact mostly sourced from Kano; also an important centre for animal hide production.

The trans-Saharan trade, then, was a nebulous and lucrative web of connection­s running goods between North Africa, West African empires and citystates and the Near East. Its downfall mostly came about as a result of the mercantile policies of Europe’s rising economic powers.

“The trans-Atlantic trade really explains the demise of trans-Saharan trade,” argues Michael Gomez, Professor of History and Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies at New York University.

Raw materials and valuable commoditie­s were drawn from West Africa’s interior and exported to Europe and North America via the ocean. This was to have a profound effect on the economies of the Sahel as it no longer made commercial sense to move goods through the desert.

Today, West Africa continues to be defined by this economic shift. Economies are geared towards coastal exports; pushing wealth to the coast while the cities of the Sahel are left neglected.

Another factor explaining the decline of the trade was the gradual downfall of West Africa’s empires due to competitio­n and warfare. Morocco’s victory over the Songhai Empire in the 16th century severely impacted the region’s ability to trade and the amount of caravans crossing the Sahara gradually began to shrink.

Routes repurposed

Not all of the connection­s between the Sahel and North Africa or the Near East have been lost. Gomez argues that northern Nigeria continued legitimate trading across the Sahara with Libya well into the 19th century. However, this is the exception not the rule. “The value of goods going into North Africa from northern Nigeria palls in comparison to the goods going to the Atlantic,” he says.

However, what does suggest a dynamic if macabre repurposin­g of the old trade routes is the recent amplificat­ion of human and contraband traffickin­g across the desert. Some of the Sahelian communitie­s involved in these illicit practices are the direct descendant­s of ex-caravaners, argues Lydon.

With very little meaningful developmen­t in the region, these communitie­s have exploited old knowledge to generate income and provide a livelihood. While these Sahel economies are largely informal, it does suggest dynamic and inter-connected markets which could be useful to policy makers looking to develop the region.

Islamist insurgency in the region can also be directly linked to the demise of formal trans-Saharan trade and its associated economic hubs. Although movements have been present in the region for quite some time, the reactionar­y and secessioni­st nature of groups like Boko Haram and Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb can be linked to economic marginalis­ation as much as ideologica­l goals. “These areas offer very few opportunit­ies,” remarks Lydon. “Joining these networks provides opportunit­ies to prosper in a new regime environmen­t beyond the curfew of nation states.”

One caravan, one 4×4

Gomez draws an interestin­g comparison between any project to revive trans-Saharan trade and China’s recent historical­ly tempered attempt to revive the old Silk Road in the form of the ‘One Belt One Road’ initiative. “China is doing so in a very concrete way,” he expands. “This is not just about nostalgia, it’s about moving forward and they’re able to do it because the sea routes and overland routes still have some utility.”

By re-imagining old trade routes through robust policy, then, China is hoping to make significan­t gains.

Evidently China - with its enormous wealth and central strategy - has very little in common with a fractured combinatio­n of some of the world’s poorest states. Yet the history upon which the revisionis­t strategy is based has marked similariti­es to the Saharan experience - only the vision and capacity differ.

Morocco has recently been making some moves in this regard. As mentioned, the kingdom has an often-overlooked history of trading and interactin­g with West Africa. King Mohammed VI and his government have been making a concerted push south for many years. Since October 2016 he has visited at least 14 African countries, travelling with large trade delegation­s, and signing a host of bilateral deals.

The African Developmen­t Bank estimates that 85 percent of Morocco’s outward foreign direct investment goes to sub-Saharan Africa. Trade lags behind, but this too is growing. Exports of Moroccan goods to West Africa tripled from 2006 to 2016. Whether the strategy is influenced by any wish to breathe life into old connection­s is unclear, but it certainly mirrors old trends.

 ??  ?? Mansa Musa, the 14th-century ruler of the Mali Empire, is widely considered as the richest person ever to have lived
Mansa Musa, the 14th-century ruler of the Mali Empire, is widely considered as the richest person ever to have lived
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