In a little more than two months, Mali’s political regime has been demolished. An armed rebellion launched on 17 January 2012 expelled the army from the north while a coup deposed President Amadou Toumani Touré (ATT) on 22 March. These two episodes ushered Mali into an unprecedented crisis that also threatens regional political stability and security. An external armed intervention would nevertheless involve considerable risks. The international community must support dialogue between the armed and unarmed actors in the north and south to favour a political solution to the crisis. The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) must readjust its mediation efforts to avoid aggravating the already deep fault lines in Malian society. Strengthening the credibility of the transitional institutions to restore the state and the security forces is an absolute priority. Finally, coordinated regional security measures must be taken to prevent originally foreign groups from turning northern Mali into a new front in the war on terror.
In Bamako, the capital, the transitional framework agreed by ECOWAS and the junta, composed of junior officers led by Captain Amadou Haya Sanogo, has failed to establish undisputed political arrangements. The junta has rallied grassroots support by capitalising on the anger of a significant minority of the population towards ATT’s government, with which it associates the interim president, Dioncounda Traoré, former head of the National Assembly. Traoré was physically attacked, and could have been killed, by supporters of the coup leaders in the presidential palace on 21 May 2012. Flown to France for treatment, he had still not returned to Bamako in mid-July. The destruction of the military apparatus and the weakness of the transitional authorities, notably the government of Prime Minister Cheick Modibo Diarra, which is soon to be reshuffled, impede the Malian forces’ ability to restore territorial integrity in the short term without the risk of serious collapse.
In the north, the Tuareg group that launched the rebellion, the National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad (Mouvement national de libération de l’Azawad, MNLA) has been outflanked by an armed Islamist group, Ansar Dine (Ançar Eddine), led by Iyad Ag Ghali, a Tuareg chief initially sidelined during the discussions that led to the creation of the MNLA. By taking control of the north, Ansar Dine has established a modus vivendi, if not a pact, with a range of armed actors, including former regime-backed Arab and Tuareg militias and, in particular, al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM). The latter is responsible for kidnapping and killing many Westerners in Mali, Niger and Mauritania, attacks against the armies of the region and involved in criminal transborder trafficking. Northern Mali could easily become a safe haven for jihadi fighters of all origins.
Considered for twenty years a model of democratic progress in sub-Saharan Africa, Mali is now on the brink of sheer dissolution. The prospects of a negotiated solution to the crisis are receding with the consolidation of hardline Islamist power in the north and a continued political, institutional and security vacuum in Bamako. Although ECOWAS initially sent out positive signals, the credibility of its diplomatic action was seriously compromised by a lack of transparency in the attempts at mediation led by Burkina Faso, which was criticised bitterly in the Malian capital and beyond. Pressure is mounting in favour of an armed external intervention as specific security and political interests of foreign actors – neighbouring states and others – prevail over those of the Malian population in both the north and south.
It would be wise to ignore calls for war and continue with existing initiatives to promote a political settlement of the conflict without, however, neglecting security issues. ECOWAS countries willing to send troops do not appear to fully grasp the complex social situation in northern Mali, and underestimate the high risk of inter-tribal settling of scores that would result from external military intervention. Such an intervention would turn Mali into a new front of the war on terror at the expense of longstanding political demands in the north and rule out any chance of peaceful coexistence between the different communities. Finally, it would expose West Africa to reprisals in the form of terrorist actions it is not equipped to respond to. AQIM’s logistical links with southern Libya and northern Nigeria (through Niger) make it perfectly feasible for it to carry out terrorist operations far from its Malian bases.
This series of events in Mali is the result of a weak political system despite democratic practices, disillusion from the lack of economic and social development in the north and south, government laxity in state management and the unprecedented external shock of the Libyan crisis. The relations between the centre of power in Bamako and its periphery under the ATT government rested on a loose network of personal, clientelistic, even mafia-style alliances with regional elites with reversible loyalties rather than on robust democratic institutions. This low-cost governance of the north was able to contain the actions of the opposition, including armed groups, given their limited military ambitions and capacities. It disintegrated when faced with a rebellion the Libyan crisis had swiftly transformed into a well-armed group and the opportunism of Islamist groups that have in recent years accumulated plenty of arms using profits from lucrative trans-Saharan trafficking of illicit merchandises and Western hostages.
The perpetuation of a battle for power in Bamako, during a transition period whose end is impossible to predict, and the confused overlapping of armed groups in the north mean the future is very uncertain. A solution to the crisis depends, first, on how to restore Mali’s territorial integrity and, second, on whether the jihadi movements manage to consolidate their position of strength in the north. The decisions of Mali’s neighbours (Algeria, Niger, Mauritania and Burkina Faso), regional organisations (ECOWAS, African Union) and Western and multilateral actors (France, U.S., UN, European Union) will also have some influence. It is urgent and necessary to restore the political, institutional and security foundations of the central state prior to working towards the north’s reintegration into the republic. It is also essential to increase humanitarian aid to the civilian population in the Sahel-Sahara region, which was already threatened with a food crisis, and quickly resume foreign aid to prevent an economic collapse.
RECOMMENDATIONS
To ensure security and strengthen the legitimacy of transitional institutions and the state
To the Interim President and the Current Prime Minister:
1. Consolidate the legitimacy
of the transitional authorities by urgently forming a genuine
government of national unity after broad consultations with the main
political parties and civil society organisations.
2. Ensure the effective
establishment of the Special Force composed of gendarmes and police
officers dedicated to the protection of transitional institutions
representatives and request, if necessary, the deployment of a small
external armed contingent to support the force.
3. Guarantee proceedings of
the judicial investigation into the assault on 21 May 2012 against the
interim president, and if progress stalls, request international
assistance to help identify and punish those who were directly and
indirectly responsible for this assault.
To the Malian Defence and Security Forces:
4. Guarantee the security and
free exercise of their duties to the prime minister, members of the
government and the National Assembly and other state officials.
5. Put an end to arbitrary arrests of civilian and military individuals and the settling of scores within the army.
6. Restructure and restore
discipline in the armed forces, under the authority of the government
and the official hierarchy of the different corps.
To Members of the Former Junta and to Leaders of the Civil Society Organisations that support them:
7. Stop the manipulation of
public opinion by divisive discourses that expose transitional
institutions representatives and politicians in general to violence.
To Mali’s Bilateral and Multilateral Partners:
8. Contribute to the reorganisation of the
Malian armed forces and provide necessary support to the effective
establishment of a force to protect the transitional institutions.
9. Help maintain the Malian economy
through a rapid resumption of foreign aid as soon as a national unity
government is formed; and answer the urgent humanitarian needs of the
civilian populations severely affected by the crisis, whether internally
displaced persons or Malian refugees in neighbouring countries.
To encourage a political settlement of the conflict in the north and neutralise the terrorist threat
To the Malian Government:
10. Refrain from launching a
military offensive to regain control of the north before creating the
conditions for negotiation with non-terrorist armed actors and community
representatives, including those the violence forced out of the
country.
11. Seek the effective
support of neighbouring countries, particularly Algeria, for a strategy
to regain sovereignty over the north and neutralise the terrorist armed
groups that threaten regional security.
To the Leaders of the National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad and Ansar Dine:
12. Formulate publicly clear agendas and commit to:
a) respecting human rights and the principles of democratic and pluralist governance, especially with regard to religion, in the areas under their control;b) guaranteeing security and equal access of the population to basic public services and facilitating the access of humanitarian organisations to the population;c) helping to establish the facts regarding the atrocities at Aguelhoc as well as all other atrocities perpetrated during the military conquest of the north;d) combatting the criminal trafficking activities that thrive in the territory they control;e) joining immediately the fight against AQIM and its armed offshoots; andf) exploring with the Malian government how to reach a rapprochement to avoid a lasting partition of the country and an internecine war.
To the Governments of Algeria, Mali, Niger and Mauritania:
13. Revive regional
cooperation in the fight against terrorism and transborder crime and
open up participation to Nigeria and the Arab Maghreb Union, notably
Libya, Morocco and Tunisia.
To the Algerian Government:
14. End the ambiguity about
how serious a threat it believes armed groups in northern Mali are for
regional security and show clear support for the restoration, even
gradual, of Mali’s sovereignty over its entire territory.
To the Economic Community of West African States, the African Union and the UN:
15. Continue to provide
humanitarian support to the civilian populations who are the direct
victims of the crisis in the three northern regions as well as to
displaced people and refugees.
16. Adopt a joint strategy,
together with the Malian authorities, that combines the establishment of
a formal framework for negotiations with the armed groups in the north,
restoration of the Malian armed forces and the mobilisation of as many
resources as possible, including military, to neutralise AQIM and other
criminal groups in northern Mali.
To the UN Security Council:
17. Support attempts to reach a comprehensive solution to the crisis within the framework of Resolution 2056 of 5 July 2012 by:
a) providing the Secretary-General’s special representative in West Africa with the necessary means to use his good offices to support ECOWAS mediation;b) adopting targeted sanctions against all those who are identified as hampering normal operation of the transitional institutions in Bamako and attempts at resolving the crisis in the north, and against all those responsible for serious human rights and international humanitarian law violations in the north and south;c) establishing an independent group of experts to investigate the origin of the financial and material resources of the armed groups in northern Mali, as well as their arms supply lines, and collate information allowing the identification of Malian and foreign persons who should face targeted sanctions; andd) requesting the creation of an independent UN commission of inquiry into the human rights and international humanitarian law violations committed throughout Malian territory since the beginning of the armed rebellion in January 2012, which should report to the Security Council as quickly as possible.
To Mali’s Bilateral and Multilateral Partners, particularly the European Union, France and the U.S.:
18. Provide political and
financial support to Malian political and social initiatives that seek
to resolve the crisis by uniting all communities, in the north and the
south, through promotion of respect for the republic’s fundamental
principles and society’s traditional religious tolerance.
19. Support efforts to
reconstitute the defence and security forces, with a view to
strengthening their cohesion, discipline and effectiveness so they can
ensure security in the south, constitute a credible threat of last
resort to protect the populations trapped in the north and be capable of
participating, if necessary, in regional actions against terrorist
groups.
20. Provide intelligence
support to the armed forces of Mali, Niger, Mauritania, Algeria, Libya
and Nigeria to help them locate terrorist groups and their arms caches.