Is
Nigeria about to invade Mali? Sorry, let me rephrase that: is a UN-backed
regional intervention force about to restore order in Mali?
In
fact, the two questions amount to the same thing, following a resolution passed
by the UN security council last week that could well pave the way for military
intervention in a country that's rapidly becoming one of the world's most
troubling security hot-spots.
Here's
the background: last March, there was a military coup in Mali. In the words of
Bruce Whitehouse, writing in the London Review of Books: "Rank-and-file
soldiers involved in a campaign against the resurgent Tuareg rebels didn’t
trust their commanders and accused officials in [the capital] Bamako of
withholding equipment and support. Mutineers captured the state television
station and stormed the presidential palace. [President Amadou Toumani] Touré
vanished into the night with a few bodyguards …"
And
here's the background to those Tuareg rebels: they've been fighting for
independence for the north of the country for many years. Some of them fought
for Muammar Gaddafi in Libya; and after his overthrow last year, they returned
home with plenty of arms. After the coup, they did try to secede, but were soon
overpowered by Islamist/jihadist groups, reportedly linked to al-Qaeda, with
whom they had been in a loose alliance.
So
now, half the country or more, including the famed city of Timbuktu, is in the
hands of the Islamists. And Western governments are desperately worried that
al-Qaeda is well on the way to establishing a new toe-hold in a newly-failed
state.
With
some rare exceptions (take a bow, Lindsey Hilsum of Channel 4 News and Mike
Thomson of our sister programme Today), much of this has gone unreported in the
mainstream Western media. But the UN security council has begun to take notice,
and the resolution passed a week ago, drafted by France, calls on Mali's
neighbours to come up with "detailed
and actionable recommendations" within 45 days for military intervention.
It
also calls on foreign governments and international organisations to provide
"co-ordinated assistance, expertise, training and
capacity-building support" to such a
force. All of which means, in all likelihood, Nigerian troops, backed by French
special forces and perhaps some US intelligence-gathering as well.
Does
any of this sound familiar? Think Somalia, where after endless delays, African
Union forces are now beginning to make real gains against the al-Shabaab
militia groups, which like their Malian equivalents, are said to be allied to
al-Qaeda.
So
will it work in Mali, if it ever happens? (It needs another security council
resolution before a force can actually move in.) The Malian army itself is
reportedly nothing like an effective fighting force, so there will have to be a
lot of careful thinking about what should be done post-intervention. (Iraq,
anyone?)
The
respected conflict resolution think-tank the International Crisis Group has
already sounded a warning:
"The
use of force may well be necessary … to neutralise some of the armed groups
involved in transnational crime activities combining terrorism, jihadism and
drug trafficking. However, any
military intervention should be preceded by political and diplomatic efforts
aimed at isolating questions regarding intercommunal tensions within Malian
society from those concerning collective security of the Sahel-Sahara region."
There
are already some grim tales emerging from the areas under the control of the
Islamists: the UN's assistant secretary-general for human rights Ivan Simonovic
told reporters after a recent visit to Mali that he had heard testimony that
forced marriage, forced prostitution, and rape were widespread, and that women
were being sold as "wives" for less than $1,000.
Islamist
militia groups have stoned to death an unmarried couple, he said, and amputated
the hand of an alleged thief, as well as destroying ancient shrines in
Timbuktu, claiming they violated Sharia law and promoted idolatry among
Muslims. (Three more shrines, all listed as World Heritage Sites, were reported
to have been destroyed yesterday.)
After
all the mistakes that have been made during previous attempts at international
military intervention, I wouldn't expect anything to happen quickly in Mali.
But it may well be that sooner or later, a force will move in.
The New
York-based artist Janet Goldner, who knows Mali well, wrote on her blog last
week: "I have been a peace activist all my life but I see no alternative
to a war in this case. The humanitarian crisis will only get worse until the
criminals are gone."
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