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Sahel armies accused of disappearances and killings, raising alarm
By Amaury HAUCHARD
Bamako (AFP) June 5, 2020

Anti-jihadist forces in the Sahel region
Paris (AFP) June 6, 2020 - French troops who killed senior Al Qaeda leader Abdelmalek Droukdel in the Sahel region of Africa this week work alongside several allied military missions.

Here is a roundup of anti-jihadist operations in the area.

- Barkhane -

Operation Barkhane is the biggest French military operation abroad, with 5,100 troops.

The forces are deployed across a Europe-sized band of the Sahel region, extending in August 2014 a previous operation dubbed Serval.

Several European nations have sent reinforcements, including Denmark with two transport helicopters and 70 soldiers to fly and maintain them.

Around 100 British soldiers and three transport helicopters have provided logistic services for Barkhane since July 2018.

The United States provides surveillance and operations data via regionally-based drones and performs aerial refuelling and transports troops.

- UN blue helmets -

The United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali (MINUSMA) deployed in July 2013, replacing an earlier mission created under the aegis of the Economic Community of West African States or ECOWAS.

MINUSMA is a peacekeeping mission that involves around 13,000 UN "blue helmets" who are not there to conduct offensive operations.

More than 200 soldiers have nonetheless died during their deployment.

Germany has contributed 1,100 troops to the mission, and Britain has agreed to send 250 for a three-year period from this year.

- G5 Sahel force -

The G5 Sahel - Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania and Niger - decided in 2017 to move ahead with a project for a joint anti-jihadist force in the region.

French President Emmanuel Macron backed the plan for a 5,000-strong force as a possible model for African countries to ensure their own security.

It has struggled to get off the ground however, and still seeks a quarter of the 400 million euros ($450 million) pledged last year by donor countries, according to Macron's office.

Cooperation between the various national contingents needs improvement and some troops have been accused of multiple human rights violations.

On Wednesday, the force inaugurated a new headquarters near Bamako, two years after the previous one in central Mali was attacked.

- EUTM Mali -

The European Training Mission in Mali comprises 620 military instructors from 28 European countries, whose job is to boost the poorly-trained and equipped Malian army.

The Europeans are not supposed to engage in combat.

EUTM Mali's mandate was extended in May 2018 for two years and trainees now include G5 Sahel troops.

- Takuba -

The European Takuba force is comprised of special operations troops who fight alongside Malian soldiers.

It has just begun operations with around 100 troops, including Estonians and Swedes, the French defence ministry said Thursday.

The Czech Republic is mulling a contribution of 150 airborne rapid-reaction soldiers, and other countries are also considering troop contributions.

Accusations of alleged forced disappearances and extrajudicial killings are mounting against national armies in the Sahel, worrying their allies in the fight against jihadist insurgents in the semi-desert African region.

The Sahel has seen years of conflict with Islamic militants, who first emerged in northern Mali in 2012 before sweeping into the centre of the country, and neighbouring Burkina Faso and Niger.

Thousands of soldiers and civilians have been killed in the conflict to date and hundreds of thousands have fled their homes.

Worries from allies such as the United Nations and former colonial power France about the conduct of Sahel soldiers are not new. But reports of abuses have increased significantly over the past few months.

Last month, for example, the UN peacekeeping mission in Mali -- known as MINUSMA -- said that the country's army committed 101 extrajudicial killings between January and March.

It added that Nigerien soldiers, operating on Malian soil, were responsible for another roughly 30 extrajudicial killings over the same period.

"These figures, names and circumstances have been documented," said Guillaume Ngefa, MINUSMA's human rights director.

Suspicions of similar abuses are also present in neighbouring Burkina Faso.

Twelve people who were arrested on suspicion of jihadist activity in the West African state died in detention in May.

Relatives and NGOs say the detainees were ordinary citizens who were summarily executed. Burkinabe authorities have promised to investigate.

Niger has faced similar accusations. The International Crisis Group, an NGO, this month pointed to 102 civilians who have gone missing from the western region of Tillaberi.

In response to suspicions of army involvement, Niger's defence ministry has vowed to investigate, although it also praised the professionalism of its troops.

- Ignored reports -

Each time human rights groups publish a missing-persons report, most people on the list usually belong to the Fulani ethnic group.

The pastoralist Fulani people are accused of being close to jihadists, a perception which has led to tit-for-tit massacres between them and other groups.

"We have made lots of reports, denounced the fact that Fulani have been killed and thrown down wells ... nothing is done afterwards," said a member of Mali's Fulani association, Tabital Pulaaku, who requested anonymity.

The president of Tabital Pulaaku, Abou Sow, said it was "undeniable" that some Fulani had become jihadists.

"But is naive to blame jihadism on one ethnic group alone," he added.

Soldiers in Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger are often poorly paid, underfunded, and suffer large casualties in skirmishes with militants.

Their governments also usually defend them from criticism.

At a U.N. security council meeting on Friday on the issue of security in the Sahel, for example, Nigerien ambassador Abdou Abarry told attendees: "we fully subscribe to human rights".

- Credibility problem -

Criticism of Sahel armies comes at a pivotal moment in the region's recent history.

The UN, for example, is facing criticism from some security council members for the size of its 13,000-strong deployment in Mali.

Triggered by the death of 13 soldiers in a helicopter crash in November, former colonial power France is also rethinking its role in the Sahel.

Jihadist attacks have continued across the region, despite the presence of UN and French troops.

Neither has the so-called G5 Sahel force appeared to dent the number of militant attacks.

Created to much fanfare in 2017, the initiative groups soldiers from five Sahel states into a joint 5,000-man anti-terror force.

Ibrahim Maiga, a Bamako-based researcher with the Institute for Security Studies, said that the priority of local armies is to eliminate the jihadist threat.

Protecting civilians is only a secondary objective, he added.

There are fears such tactics could backfire.

General Pascal Facon, the French military commander in the region, told AFP that abuses committed by Sahel armies are "intolerable," and added that they could undermine credibility in armed forces.

ah-prh/stb/eml/lc

ISS A/S


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