Tag: Mali

  • As Nigerian troops deploy in Mali

    As Nigerian troops deploy in Mali

    There is a saying in Yoruba that if your neighbour is feeding on house rat and you fail to warn him, by the time he begins to cough at night you will not be able to sleep. Since the fall of the Moammer Ghadafi regime in Libya about two years ago the rest of North Africa has not been able to sleep due largely to the terrorist activities of armed supporters of the late dictator displaced by the Libyan revolution.

    Working in concert with other terrorist groups aligned with al Qeada in the Maghreb region, the ex Ghadafi boys trained by the slain dictator are all over North Africa causing havoc and are beginning to show their hands in West Africa.

    For the over three decades that Colonel Ghadafi was in charge in Libya he harboured and trained terrorists from other African countries who later returned home to destabilize their countries. Remember Charles Taylor and his NPFL rebels in Liberia including Yommie Johnson’s? They were all trained by Ghadafi in Libya and funded by him to cause the civil war that later engulfed the West African country. The Sierra Leonean civil war and the general instability in the Mano River region including Guinea and to some extent Cote D’Ivoire could all be traced back to Ghadafi and his band of terrorists. The Chadian civil war in the 80s had its roots in Libya.

    Throughout his stay in the Presidential Villa in Tripoli, Ghadafi was never at peace with his Arab neighbours as well as he was once accused of sponsoring an assassination attempt on late King Fahd of Saudi Arabia at one Arab League summit. Yet with all his terrorist tendencies and destabilization activities in the continent and beyond well known, nobody in the defunct Organisation of African Unity (OAU) did call him to order. Citing a provision in OAU’s charter that forbids member States from interfering in the internal affairs of another member country, African leaders looked the other way as Ghadafi was causing trouble all over the place even when his activities amounted to interference in those countries he was destabilizing.

    Shortly after his fall these band of terrorists spread across North Africa and some, especially the Touaregs of West Africa moved back into the region with all their arms and ammunitions and West Africa has known no peace ever since. After unsuccessful attempts at having a foot hold in Mauritania, these terrorists took a large chunk of Mali, especially the north, last year and were beginning to spread to the south on their way to overthrowing the government in Bamako when French forces intervened and drove them back.

    France, acting under a United Nations resolution last week sent Special Forces and fighter jets to Mali to confront the rebels and their al-Qeada allies pending the arrival of a West African force to be led by Nigeria’s Major General Shehu Usman Abdulkadir. The Nigerian led International Support Mission to Mali (AFISMA) will draw troops and equipments largely from Nigeria, Chad, Niger, Senegal, Burkina Faso, Togo and Benin Republic.

    Last week the Nigerian senate approved a request by President Goodluck Jonathan to deploy 1,200 Nigerian troops to Mali and over the weekend the Nigerian Air Force sent two fighter jets join the war.

    Not a few Nigerians are worried about the deployment of our soldiers in Mali and their worries are well founded. In the 90s Nigeria was at the head of a West African intervention force called ECOMOG that was dispatched by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) to intervene in the Liberian civil war. Our troops were also involved in Sierra Leone where another civil war was raging. In both instances we had bitter stories to tell. Though the wars were eventually halted and peace restored in the two countries, our soldiers were bruised and our efforts largely unappreciated especially by Charles Taylor who eventually became president of Liberia. The cost of the wars to Nigeria, especially Liberia’s was enormous both in terms of human and material resources. Many Nigerian civilians were massacred by Taylor and his NPFL rebels in Liberia just because our troops came to intervene in the war. Many of our soldiers were killed and millions of dollars spent (much of which was wasted) prosecuting the war which most Nigerians believed we had no business being part of. I doubt whether Nigeria has recovered fully, especially militarily from the effect of that war and now that we are getting involved in another West African war, the rule of engagement and the tenure of our involvement must be well spelt out to avoid a repeat of what we went through in Liberia and Sierra Leone.

    While some might want to argue that Nigeria being far away from the theatre of war in Mali has no business sending soldiers there, the fact that some of the Boko Haram militants threatening the peace in northern Nigeria had reportedly confessed to receiving training in Mali is enough to convince that the Malian civil war is a threat to the Nigerian nation. The facts also that some elements of al-Qeada have been found to be offering support to Boko Haram and the weekend attack and killing of two members of Nigeria’s contingent to AFISMA by a hitherto unknown terrorist group somewhere in Kogi state are further justifications for our involvement in Mali.

    But in sending our troops to Mali, care must be taken to ensure that all the necessary equipment and logistical support were provided for them, including their allowances. It is hoped that those being sent have been properly trained both in peace keeping and enforcement, and the rules of engagement properly spelt out. The scandals that accompanied our involvement in ECOMOG must be totally avoided in AFISMA. Our soldiers must behave well especially in their relationship with local civilians including the women.

    Now that we are in Mali, the likelihood of the terrorists and their allies in Nigeria particularly Boko Haram targeting strategic places and even military installations in the country should not be ruled out hence the need to scale up security protection around such places. Areas with high civilian congregation should also be properly protected while some high profile individuals both within and outside government should also be given increased protection. Nobody could say for sure the reason behind the gun attack on the convoy of the Emir of Kano, Alhaji Ado Bayero in Kano at the weekend. People like him could be vulnerable.

    It will also not be out of place for the Foreign Affairs Ministry to issue a travel advice to Nigerians living in Mali in particular and neighbouring West African countries to be less visible and avoid volatile areas where they could be singled out for attack by the terrorists or their sympathizers.

  • Making a mess of Mali

    Making a mess of Mali

    •In the space between Hades and Hell lies the reality of war

    Landlocked and straddling the edge of subsistence in the best of times, Mali has slipped into the lap of chaos. Trapped between the evil of the past and that of the present, the sleepy, bucolic state has transmogrified into a battlefield between the West and that which the West dreads: violent radicals seeking to establish a society based on a mutant understanding of Islam on any inch of dirt to which they are able to stake claim no matter how wretched the soil. Bit players in this showdown are the Malians themselves. The sad motif recurs. Once again, Africans become the dangling branches of a strange tree planted on their land. They are the recipients, not the makers, of their destiny.

    For decades, Mali complied with the neocolonial instructions of the western powers. The nation was heralded as a model of African development and democracy. Little of this was African and not too much of it was development or democracy. Having invested significantly in Mali, the West had to proclaim Mali worked well in order to vindicate the neoliberal molding of that nation’s political economy. The West dubbed the country a resounding success; the West was guilty of false advertisement. The nation’s progress was shallow and transient. Even this progress in miniature was not a homegrown, organic occurrence; it was imported in the briefcases and tutorials of Western subvention. In effect, Mali stood on borrowed legs. Borrowed limbs are never enough to prevent a tumble for the limbs always return to their master.

    The nation’s slow descent would have gone unattended by foreign hands but for the Libyan crisis. Libya represents an abject lesson in foreign policy humility. Libya should have remained an internal affair. Western claims that Gaddafi was intent on massacre in Benghazi is not substantiated by objective evidence. Gaddafi never threatened such a thing. The claim was a manufactured pretext for Western intervention to oust the hated dictator though he posed no threat beyond his borders.

    So confident in their superior power, Western nations believed they could firmly control the crisis and its aftermath. They were wrong. In operation were complex undercurrents and riptides the West did not even recognize, let allow comprehend. Gaddafi was a ruthless man whose rule constituted a grave disfavor to his people. A man who cannot govern his impulses cannot wisely govern a nation. Yet, he served as warden in a harsh, parlous neighborhood. His demise loosed destructive forces which he had contained despite his long tryst with mental derangement. These forces would leave Libya to find homestead in weak, decaying Mali.

    On one hand, Taureg irregulars from Mali had allied with Gaddafi. The dictator’s relationship with the Tauregs served both countries. It shored Gaddafi’s security machinery while being a release valve for Taureg separatist pressure in Mali. When Gaddafi fell, the Tauregs went home with war hot on their minds. Their return transformed meandering separatist activity into a purposeful, well-armed independence movement.

    So eager to undo Gaddafi, the West allied with radical Islamists to reach this goal. The union dissolved as quickly as it had come. With Gaddafi, the West was assured extreme Jihadists were not welcomed in Libya. Now that he is gone, violent radicals who once had no say now seek to control Libya and have poured into Mali for the same purpose.

    Although foes in Libya, Tauregs and Jihadists joined hands in Mali. Mainstream news reports claim the Jihadists have taken over the insurrection, embittering and sidelining the Tauregs in the process. These reports must be taken with a grain of suspicion. Dissension between the two groups has occurred but probably not to the extent the media claims. Reports of Taureg-Jihadist scrimmaging are infrequent and do not imply a total split. Moreover, it seems unlikely that ad-hoc contingents of foreign intruders could advance so adroitly over unknown terrain without significant local help.

    War often is bought on the cheap but its end always is a costly purchase. In this exchange, the world purchased war with Libya and acquired an unwanted one in Mali. For the West, this is a considerable mistake causing its nations to expend resources they would have rather kept inactive but on the ready. For Africa, the crisis is a bulging error. Supporting the West in a war that did not need fighting, sub-Saharan Africa has brought to its doorstep a war it must fight but one for which it is ill-suited.

    Opportunistically focusing on Mali, the Jihadists realized the country was a chicken ready for plucking. The government was in disarray and the army in tatters. Key Taureg commanders and soldiers had defected from the army to join league with their brethren returning from Libya. In an instant, the balance of military power had shifted in Mali. Regional and domestic dynamics had suddenly turned the low-simmering Taureg revolt into the dominant power. When Jihadists entered the fray, the balanced tipped more unfavorably against the demoralized government. In short order, the rebels seized the northern half of the nation and advanced toward a strategic airfield, important water and agricultural installations and ultimately, toward the capital. The demise of the government in Bamako seemed ordained. Enter the French to save its former ward.

    The previous years of western investment in Mali have come to naught. America has engaged in the unreliable business of training West African militaries for years under the Trans-Saharan Counterterrorism Initiative, the precursor to today’s AFRICOM. Until the coup, the Malian army was considered one of its achievements. The coup calls into question the utility of American military training to the goal of democratization. After all, the putsch was engineered by a captain who had been one of the primary beneficiaries of intensive American training. Sad coincidence? Perhaps. More likely it is form of caveat emptor regarding struggling African nations and Western military training. Upon purchasing a rabid wolf, one must not be surprised or declaim too loudly when it rips at your leg.

    The struggle for Mali is now portrayed as one of democracy versus religious intolerance, the West against the Jihadists. This portrait ignores the genuine internal fissures that afflict Mali. Tauregs ignited this rebellion for reasons they believe important. Land and water grabs by Western and Libyan firms linked to the West threaten Taureg economic interests. Without settling these issues, the crisis in Mali will not be resolved. As long as Tauregs are disgruntled, Jihadists will find an alcove among them just as they do with frontier tribes in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Yemen. Sadly, events have taken on such a martial trajectory that political discussions will be precluded for the time being.

    The French have rapidly deployed well over a thousand troops and have commended daily bombardment of the Islamists’ forward positions. This decision was not a sudden one. The French had a counteroffensive contingency plan on the ready. Paris hoped the Malian army would have been better at self-defense, thus making French direct intervention unnecessary. When the army crumpled like a cheap box, the French were forced to act.

    Once France made its dramatic entry, African nations were duty bound to follow. Yet, this situation gives sad testimony to the present state of many African nations. Instead of looking toward an independent future where the nation can plot its own way, Mali is left with the choice of falling into the hands of its colonial master or of falling prey to the excesses of vile zealots. No doubt, the former comes with strings attached. The latter comes with the danger that one’s head might be detached at the slightest perception of heresy.

    Consequently, the nation is left to choose between bad and worse.

    All of this places African nations in a diplomatic bind. The French objective is to stop extremists from gaining a toehold from where they can hatch plots against France. While this may give respite to Malians, French concern s more to stop the extremists than to help Mali out of the bog. However, ECOWAS’s objective is to restore the American dream of constitutional democracy and free markets to Malian soil. The French have firepower but a limited objective. ECOWAS has less firepower yet the larger objective.

    There will be friction between the two allies. This will be resolved to France’s liking. The military division of labor will be that France controls the airspace. French troops will protect Bamako and other strategic points. Some French troops will engage as skirmishers to halt radical advances and to probe for alleys of counterattack. The French are unlikely to commit themselves to a significant ground assault. In essence, the French are in a holding position. They are biding time for ECOWAS to deploy. Once deployed, ECOWAS troops will be expected to take the frontline to spearhead the decisive counteroffensive with the aid of Western aerial support. This accords with the division of labor used in Libya. Just as in Libya, the conflict in Mali will take months to determine if this truly becomes the division of military labor between the West and Africa. Such gradualism will heavily test the capacity of African nations but suits Western interests. The longer the war, the larger the profits for the Western military complex. Moreover, the weaker other African states become due to this exertion, the more leverage the West will have over them.

    Already, the trouble in Mali has not stayed in Mali. Mayhem has spilled into Algeria in dramatic and lethal fashion. The deadly hostage episode there will not be the last in that nation. Ironically, Libya announced it had closed the border with Mali due to the unrest. Tripoli apparently feared the desert winds would blow back into Libya the unrest Libya had chased into Mali. As such, the border closure is a sad joke. Additionally, the weakling Libyan government does not control the streets of its own capital. How does it think it can regulate a distant border separated by hundreds of miles of desolate sand, heat and lawlessness?

    Perhaps the most salient news this week was a CNN report confirming United States Defense Secretary Panetta’s previous statement that American unmanned drone bombers may soon fly Nigerian airspace. This confirms America sees a direct, growing link between Al Qaeda and Nigeria’s Boko Haram. Given the violence Boko Haram has unleashed on innocent people, the American position incites an emotional appeal. Hardliners and Old Testament, eye-for-an-eye apostles will applaud this move. Yet, the logic behind it is deceptive and dangerously so. The policy’s bottom line is to kill Boko Haram leaders in retribution for their murder of the innocent. This is easy to conceive but nigh impossible to implement simultaneously with precision and decisive effect.

    Pakistan and Afghanistan are the laboratories were drone experiments have been conducted the longest. The drone campaigns have succeeded in killing thousands of people, many of them the intended terrorist targets. But many have been unarmed innocents whose only crime was to reside in close proximity to the bombs’ targets. Despite the years of strikes, neither Pakistan nor Afghanistan is better off. Both are rife with violence. For every terrorist slain, another is recruited. The same goes for Yemen and Somalia. While effective tactical killing machines, drones have demonstrated only negligible strategic value in defeating the organizations of terrorism.

    In Nigeria, terrorist leaders hide in more urbanized, densely populated areas than in Pakistan and Afghanistan. If drones are used in this environment, more innocents will be killed here than in the other nations. Yet, like Pakistan and Afghanistan, it is unlikely the drones will decapitate the target organization.

    Resort to drones only makes strategic sense based on the conclusion that Boko Haram will collapse if a few key members are silenced. However, if Boko Haram is an amorphous affiliation of gangs and sub-sets, drones will do no better in Nigeria than in Pakistan. Instead, constant bombings will raise anti-Western sentiment to a higher pitch. For every innocent person killed, two will come to sympathize with or join Boko Haram. The empirical evidence indicates that drones contribute to a war of attrition where the thing mostly attrited is peace. Drone use tends to radicalize populations affected by the bombing. Tactical kills are registered but the objective of ending terrorism grows more distant because bombing is reviled by the people on the ground. This is the human factor that drone advocates ignore. Ending an insurgency is predicated on shifting the goodwill of the people away from the insurgents. Yet, assassination by drone is a campaign more vindictive than victorious. If drones are deployed, America would have tossed the hearts and minds of the people into the gutter.

    Should Defense Secretary Panetta have his way, planes dispensing death will soon be overhead in northern Nigeria. These planes belong to a military superior to any in Africa. That foreign military will decide which Nigerian is a terrorist and will make the decision based on secret factors of which no Nigerian will be aware. This will take place in the skies over Africa’s strongest nation. To say that colonialism is dead is to mouth one of the world’s seven greatest fables and no one presently remembers the other six.

    In the early 20th century, the gunboat was the preferred instrument of strong-arm diplomacy. In the early 21st century, the gunboat has been supplanted by an unmanned aerial assassin, the drone. While the devices have changed, the mean calculations rationalizing their usage remain constant. Scientific man has advanced but political man remains a beast that prowls on all fours. He perverts science to create machines that fulfill selfish objectives more incarnadine than intelligent, more feral than fine.

    Africa has entered a dangerous period. Mali is the first nation forced to walk the slim precipice between the neocolonial interests of the West and the rapine ways of extreme Jihadists. Instead of determining its own fate, an African nation once again has become the playground for the machinations of others. Sadly, Mali will not be last of our nations made to take the dire walk. The weaker the nation and its institutions, the more likely it will be to fall into the swell. This is a moment for the nations of the continent to marshal their scarce resources to take the lead in rescuing Mali and not merely trying to hold the extremists to a stalemate. It is beyond time for the nations to marshal their diplomatic courage, wisdom and foresight to forge a coordinated, strategic response to the twin dangers (neocolonial encroachment versus jihadist chaos) made manifest by the Malian crisis. The time is late. Soon the clock strikes twelve.

     

    08060340825 (sms only)

     

  • NAF deploys 2 fighter jets to Mali

    The Nigerian Air Force on Friday, in Abuja, deployed two of its fighter jets to Mali to assist the country to reclaim its north from Islamic militants.

    Speaking at a ceremony at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, Air Commodore Yusuf Anas, the Director of Air Force Information and Public Relations, said the deployment was in line with President Goodluck Jonathan’s directive.

    He said: “this afternoon, we are deploying the Alpha Jets to Mali to begin operations.’’

    Anas identified the jets as NAF 452 and NAF 455, adding that the operation would be led by AVM. Tayo Oguntoyibo.

    The director said that 56 Air Force Regiment personnel had already been deployed from Port-Harcourt to Mali.

    The degenerating crisis in Mali had compelled ECOWAS Heads of Government to intervene with the deployment of military forces.

    The UN Security Council Resolution 2085 of December 2012 approved the deployment of ECOWAS Security Force, following the request of the Mali Government.

  • EU to approve military training mission to Mali

    EU to approve military training mission to Mali

    The European Union is due on Thursday to approve a mission to train Mali’s military forces, at an extraordinary meeting of the bloc’s foreign ministers.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that the meeting was convened after the conflict escalated last week and France became involved.

    Last year, the EU decided in principle to send around 200 military trainers to Mali, to help Bamako regain control over the country’s north after it was seized by the rebels.

    That deployment had now become “necessary and urgent,’’ a senior EU official said on Wednesday, adding that the bloc was looking at other means of assistance that could be deployed swiftly.

    But one EU diplomat said the training mission would not start work until a “stable situation’’ had been achieved in southern Mali, where they will be based.

    The trainers will not be involved in combat.

    A reconnaissance mission is to visit the country in coming days to fine-tune the needs of the training mission, the actual deployment of which is expected to be approved in February.

    Malian Foreign Minister, Tieman Coulibaly, will also join Thursday’s talks in Brussels.

    Last week, the rebels who have controlled northern Mali since March began to push south, prompting France to launch a military intervention in its former colony.

    The EU has pledged to financially support an African-led mission to Mali, and is working closely with regional bloc ECOWAS, which is getting ready a 3,300-strong force to help in the fight against the rebels.

    At the same time, the EU is expected to put pressure on Mali’s transitional government to push forward with a roadmap towards full political legitimacy, which in turn would free further funding from the 27-member bloc.

    “Our message now is it’s urgent to get this (roadmap) on the table,” the source said on condition of anonymity.

    “What’s happening now should not impede the re-establishment of proper government.’’

     

  • U.S, Canada, EU hail Nigeria’s intervention in Mali

    U.S, Canada, EU hail Nigeria’s intervention in Mali

    The United States, Canada and the European Union have pledged their support to Nigeria and France for deploying troops to Mali.

    This is contained in a statement signed by the Spokesman in the Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Mr. Ogbole Ode, in Abuja on Thursday.

    The statement said that heads of mission from the four countries made the pledge when the Nigerian Foreign Affairs Minister, Amb. Gbenga Ashiru, briefed them on the update of troops deployment under the auspices of the ECOWAS African-led International Support Mission in Mali (AFISMA).

    They advised that the military strategy should also be pursued along with the political process, which should involve various parties in Mali.

    The statement said that Ashiru informed the envoys that the crisis in Mali was an issue of deep concern not only to West Africa but to Africa, Europe and the rest of the world.

    “It is against this backdrop that the military operations by the French to dislodge Islamic militants and to regain northern Mali deserved the unflinching support of the international community,’’ the News Agency of Nigeria the statement as saying on Thursday.

     

  • 90 Nigerian troops head for Mali

    90 Nigerian troops head for Mali

    President Goodluck Jonathan has ordered the deployment of troops to Mali as part of Nigeria’s contribution to the ECOWAS security force put in place to reclaim the country from Islamic terrorists.

    Director of Defence Information, Col. Mohammed Yerima, who briefed journalists on Tuesday, said a contingent made of 190 troops would depart for Mali within the next 24 hours.

    Yerima added that another batch of the troops would follow in the days ahead.

    Yerima stated: “The degenerating crisis in the Republic of Mali compelled the ECOWAS Heads of Government to intervene with a deployment of their military forces.

    “Following this decision and in line with Nigeria’s acclaimed peacekeeping roles and in the spirit of African brotherhood, the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Dr. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan has ordered the immediate deployment of Nigerian troops to Mali.

    ‘‘The President approved the deployment of a Battallion and in the next 24 hours, a Company of the Battalion [190] will be deployed. The remainder would be deployed later. Already, the Force Commander, Major General S. U. Abdulkadir is on ground in Mali.

    “Also, a technical team of the Nigerian Army and Air Force are already in Mali to facilitate the eventual full deployment of Fighter Aircraft and support element.”

    The United Nations Security Council Resolution 2085 of December 2012 had approved the deployment of ECOWAS Security Force to assist Mali in reclaiming the northern part of the country from Islamic militants.

    While speaking with journalists at the wreath laying ceremony to commemorate the Armed Forces Remembrance Day, the Chief of Army Staff, Lt Gen. Azubuike Ihejirika, said the situation in Mali is a threat to security in Nigeria.

     

  • UN backs Mali intervention force

    UN backs Mali intervention force

    The United Nations Security Council has authorised an African-led military force to try to oust Islamists from northern Mali.

    The BBC reports the council unanimously voted to give the force an initial one-year mandate.

    The resolution also sets “benchmarks” for Mali, including political reconciliation and improved training for the military.

    Armed groups, some linked to al-Qaeda, took control of northern Mali after a military coup in March and established a harsh form of Islamic law.

    The Economic Community of West African States said it has 3,300 troops ready to go to Mali – although an operation is not expected to begin before September 2013.

    The resolution, drafted by France, sets out a multi-stage process for reunifying Mali.

    European Union and other UN member states are tasked with helping to rebuild Mali’s army, which collapsed when Tuareg nationalists and Islamist rebels overran the north.

    The BBC says the idea is to get the army into shape for a joint military operation with the ECOWAS force.

     

  • Softly, softly on Mali

    Softly, softly on Mali

    • Let’s win the ‘war’ at home first before marching troops there

     

    NIGERIA loves to pride herself as the nation that responds fast to requests for sending troops to strife-stricken places around the world. It is a credential we flaunt so much it is almost becoming the rationale for our existence. Indeed, it is as if our leaders beg for opportunity to send our hapless uniformed men to conflict zones.

    The current move to send troops to Mali has once again raised a few critical questions. Although, the planned expedition is a joint initiative of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and largely bankrolled by the UN, the questions still must be asked: Is Nigeria psychologically stable enough to embark on a foreign mission with so much trouble on the home front? What is her strategic interest in fighting in Mali, and lastly, what are the end-game scenarios and possible long-term consequences?

    Apart from the ego trip that such expeditions sometimes are, we want to wager that the dollar per man ratio is good too. Of course, nobody gives account of the funding from the United Nations (UN); but more sinister, there is no public accountability for our men on these missions. It is doubtful whether there is any record of our previous activities in peace-keeping across the globe: number of deaths, the disabled and the welfare of their dependants?

    As we had written on this page earlier in the year (see “Gunning after Mali,” April 24, 2012), “this is not the best of times for Nigeria to send her troops abroad to fight an utterly unprovoked war… It cannot be over-emphasised that the Federal Government must join this fray with ample clear-headedness. The fight with the (Malian) Islamists will neither be quick nor easy.

    First, the north of Mali is a difficult desert terrain and the Islamists who are majorly Tuaregs will not engage the ‘peace-keepers’ in a conventional warfare. With a combination of suicide attacks and ambush tactics, this seemingly quick and simple intervention might go on for years, turning into a punishing odyssey in which retreat would be an utter humiliation, especially for Nigeria.”

    There is yet another twist. Nigeria has no contiguous borders with Mali, therefore, it could be argued that the activities of the Islamists would have no direct debilitating effect on Nigeria. Remarkably, Algeria which has a large swathe of border with Mali would not accede to the use of force, preferring instead, to intensify dialogue as the best path to peace. Nigeria and indeed ECOWAS must listen to Algeria; there must be something more she knows about the crisis in Mali.

    We restate that Nigeria has nothing to prove in joining the military operation in Mali and nothing to lose either if it allows this fight to pass while other African countries prosecute it. We are tempted to begin to think that the Federal Government does not seem to appreciate the enormity of the problems at home. For instance, the violent Boko Haram sect ravaging a large expanse of northern Nigeria is still alive and well, with no proper remedy wrought yet.

    More worrisome however, is the extreme poverty besetting Nigeria today, partly occasioned by a large ‘army’ of unemployed youths. The result of this phenomenon is the clear and present danger of a social upheaval of immense magnitude. There is no doubt that going to Mali is a mere ego trip that would not translate to any tangible benefits. Nigeria can support the venture in principle without necessarily participating in the operation. We urge all concerned to impress it on the Federal Government to face the ‘war’ at home and let this Mali trip pass.

     

  • 3000 troops for Mali mission

    3000 troops for Mali mission

    Nigeria and other members of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) will contribute 3,000 troops to the United Nations Intervention Mission to check Al-Qaeda and Boko Haram in Mali .

    The Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps plans to send 200 members of its armed squad to join the team.

    It was also learnt yesterday that the United Nations Security Council will meet tomorrow to consider the Action Plan for the intervention in Mali.

    But, unlike a similar campaign in Liberia, the UN will solely bear the cost of the mission in Mali.

    According to a highly-placed source, who spoke in confidence on the Mali mission, the troops will be deployed immediately after approval by the Security Council.

    The source said: “We are set for the military intervention in Mali anytime from now. On the whole, ECOWAS will send a 3,000-man force to that country to check the Al-Qaeda Movement and their allies like Boko Haram.

    “All ECOWAS members will contribute troops in proportion to their population and military strength. The details are already being worked out by military chiefs of all the countries.”

    A report of the Action Plan will be submitted and considered by the UN Security Council tomorrow, said the source, who stressed that the operation “won’t be like ECOMOG in Liberia which was one-sided and mainly shouldered by Nigeria”.

    Responding to a question, the source added: “The military is working out the cost, which will be funded by the UN. Do not forget, it is, however, purely a UN operation.

    “We have just received a report that contributions to the Force might come from outside because some European nations have shown interest to be part of the intervention.”

    Asked why the UN opted for the military intervention, the source, a senior government official who pleaded not to be named, said: “If Mali becomes the den of Al-Qaeda , Nigeria will feel the effects more because we are already grappling with Boko Haram crisis.

    “You can imagine the whole of West Africa under terrorist siege; we won’t be able to cope at all. Already, over 200,000 families have been displaced in Northern Mali .

    “Some people have been criticising the Federal Government for encouraging ECOWAS members for this mission, but we are talking of the survival of this country.”

    A source in NSDC said: “About 200 officers and men of our armed squad might be part of the troops to be deployed in Mali .

    “Already, they are undergoing orientation on this mission. We are eager to join the Force because it will be a major test for our armed unit.”

    Besides its 2071 Resolution, the UN Security Council had on October 12 given ECOWAS a 45-day deadline to finalise the Action Plan to liberate Northern Mali from militants.

    The resolution, drafted by France, called for “detailed and actionable recommendations” to be presented to the Security Council within the specified time.

    It urged UN member states and regional and international organizations to provide “co-ordinated assistance, expertise, training and capacity-building support” to Mali’s armed forces.

     

  • Before we move into Mali

    Before we move into Mali

    The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) is urgently putting together an intervention force of about 4,000 soldiers to reclaim Northern Mali from Tuareg rebels who on April 6, under the banner of the National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad (MNLA), unilaterally declared the independent state of Azawad. According to rebel leaders, Azawad, which constitutes about 60 percent of Malian territory, comprises the regions of Timbuktu, Kidal, Gao, as well as a part of Mopti region. If the territory endures, it will share borders with Burkina Faso to the south, Mauritania to the west and Northwest, Algeria to the north and Northeast, and Niger to the east and Southeast, with southern Mali to its Southwest. After the Battle of Gao on 27 June, the Islamist groups Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa and Ansar Dine took control of northern Mali, pushing out the MNLA.

    Until a number of issues are resolved, however, it would be unwise for Nigeria to join forces with the intervention force in Mali. Some of these issues were thrown up by the March coup d’etat led by Captain Amadou Sanogo, which saw the deposition of President Amadou Toumani Traore. Shortly after, ECOWAS imposed a short-lived regime of sanctions to pressure Sanogo to relinquish power. But even before crippling sanctions brought the usurpers to heel, ECOWAS inexplicably accepted a disingenuous compromise that foolishly forced the resignation of the president a month to the end of his tenure. It also led to the appointment of the former Speaker of the National Assembly of Mali, Dioncounda Traore, as the interim president, former Foreign minister, Cheick Modibo Diarra, as prime minister, and the installation of a new cabinet.

    While the coup leaders, unprincipled Malian politicians, and pusillanimous ECOWAS leaders engaged in horse-trading, the rebels in the northern parts of the country seized the opportunity to declare independence. This made the coup, which was in the first instance staged to force the deposed president to take the rebellion more seriously, quite absurd. In fact, Reuters described the coup as a “spectacular own-goal,” and Hardball in one of his many essays on Mali described the short-lived ECOWAS sanctions as snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.

    It is obvious the UN Security Council is eager to approve the ECOWAS force in Mali because of the fear that Azawad was already turning into a hotbed of Islamic militants affiliated to al-Qaeda in the Maghreb (AQIM). Not only have the rebels brought Azawad under strict Afghanistan-type Sharia law, with stoning of suspects and amputation of their limbs, they have also welcomed battle-hardened militants from Libya and adventurers from Algeria looking for a fight. Neither ECOWAS nor the Security Council is prepared to have another territory in Africa where hotheads are trained and exported.

    Before Nigeria signs up for the Mali adventure, it must do its homework well, and the National Assembly must ensure it is satisfied before authorising the use of force. First is the fact that Algeria, which shares a 1,400km border with northern Mali, and which would be affected by a war next door, still thinks there is room for negotiations. Moreover, the US Secretary of State, Mrs Hillary Clinton, and the UN have been unable to persuade Algeria to agree to the use of force. Second, and more crucially, the underlying problems which predisposed groups to rebellion have not been addressed. The coup leaders foolishly played into the hands of the rebels by destroying democracy in Mali. If ECOWAS regains northern Mali, is it to hand it over to Captain Sanogo, who while not in power still wields enormous influence over the country and its weak interim leadership? In April, ECOWAS irresponsibly agreed to a 12-month transition to elected government. It is not clear how the defeat of rebels will serve as impetus to democracy, when it seems more paradoxically likely that it would serve as breathing space for Sanogo and his stooges.

    Before going into Mali, Nigeria must insist on the coup leaders surrendering effective control, their retirement from the military, and a reconstitution of the country’s security system. It is no use risking the lives of our soldiers for a cause that is doubtful and whose ends are uncertain and helpful only to coup leaders. Nigeria must also examine how far the transitional government has gone in restoring civil rule, especially when the ECOWAS mandate given to the Interim President to organise presidential and legislative polls will expire in five months.