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Tag Archives: Sahel crisis

The Institute of Current World Affairs on Senegal and the Sahel & the Ambassador of Niger Shines

01 Saturday Jun 2013

Posted by africaindc in DC Corridors of Power, Events, Uncategorized

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African officials on Kidal, African peanut butter cookies, Bruce Whitehouse, Cosmos club, Embassy of Niger, Gao, Hannah Armstrong, Institute of Current World Affairs, Mali, Maman Sidikou, Niger, peanuts in Africa, Sahel crisis, Senegal, Tuareg

The Institute of Current World Affairs (ICWA), hosted a discussion on agriculture in Senegal and the crisis in the Sahel (read Mali) this morning at the Cosmos Club as part of its semi-annual meeting and symposium this morning.  Perhaps most notable, and most exciting for those interested in the Sahel, was the appearance of the Ambassador of Niger, Maman Sidikou, who really has me excited about Mahamadou Issoufou’s government in Niger.

I am not particularly familiar with ICWA’s work, but based on some conversations I had with its members and some brief comments by its staff, I get the impression they have not traditionally engaged African issues in much depth; it is always good to see new movement in Africa’s direction.

Before going any further, a brief observation on the demographics of the crowd may be revealing, it consisted overwhelmingly of retirees or people of that age – probably 85% of those present.

2013-06-01 09.17.11

Senegal

Jori Lewis, a much younger ICWA fellow, and a journalist by profession, spoke about her experiences living in Senegal for two years: her culture shock, love for the Senegalese national dish thieboudienne, and her work researching the country’s peanut industry.

She is now working on a history of the peanut and its African and American connections and hopes to start a peanut butter cookie producing business in Senegal (which may export cookies to the ECOWAS subregion).

From L - R: Armstrong, Gwin, Whitehouse

From L – R: Armstrong, Gwin, Whitehouse

Sahel

A panel discussion on the Sahelian crisis followed.  Hannah Armstrong, an ICWA fellow with security interests who has been floating around the Sahel/Sahara was joined by the Anthropologist Bruce Whitehouse, who was living right around the corner from her in Mali last year and the trio was rounded out by Peter Gwin of the National Geographic, who has spent considerable time in Mali’s famed outpost, TImbuktu.

Whitehouse provided a fairly comprehensive overview of recent developments in Mali over the past decade, which I suspect most readers of this blog will be familiar with.  He noted that while Mali had been beset by ‘rampant corruption’ in recent years, this was accompanied by tangible gains in the economic and human development spheres (although he described himself as an aid skeptic). He spoke of his frustration with the best intentioned efforts of ill-informed diplomats in the West who have cause much harm to Africa.  He cited the impending elections in Mali, scheduled at the end of July, as being on a timetable set by France and giving him much cause for pessimism.

Gwin provided an overview of ethnic and economic tensions in Timbuktu, one of the main cities in northern Mali that fell outside the control of the government.

Hannah Armstrong spoke of a visit to Gao, the second major city in Mali’s north to be liberated as a result of France’s recent intervention.  She criticized those in the West for the romantic notions they often ascribed to the Tuareg and she singled out France 24 and Al-Jazeera as contributing to that discourse by giving Tuareg representatives preferential access to the airwaves.

She also made some mildly apologist notes for Algeria’s authoritarian government, but she did not have the time to draw her thoughts out in too much detail.

The Awesome Ambassador

The highlight of the event was the informal engagement of the Ambassador of Niger, Maman Sidikou.  He expressed concern that the third major city in the north of Mali, Kidal, had not fallen back into the administration of the central government.  On a point that I agree with emphatically, he spoke of his tenure with the World Bank and its tendency to paint projects as always being a rosy success (the implication being that this is what happened in Mali writ large).

He also instilled a cautionary note in a brief discourse on ethnic mixing in Niger.  He mentioned that he has family roots in Mali and spoke of a significant degree of ethnic mixing in Niger, including the multi-ethnic union that will result from his own son’s impending marriage.  He warned that the security of the region was threatened much more by foreign jihadists than local Tuaregs.

If more ambassadors showed up at these types of events, I’m sure that policies would be much better.  Kudos to Ambasador Sidikou.

 

 

 

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My Take on Events this Week at USIP (Kenya) and the Carnegie Endowment (Sahel)

20 Monday May 2013

Posted by africaindc in Analysis, DC Corridors of Power, Events, Uncategorized

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Carnegie Endowment, ICC, Kenya's elections, Sahel crisis, Uhuru Kenyatta, USAID Kenya, USIP

There are two events coming up this week that I would like to comment on.

The first, this Tuesday at the United States Institute of Peace, asks “Why Were Kenya’s 2013 Elections Peaceful?  I’ll admit to generally sharing the frustrations that many expressed in regards to the constant predictions of violence in the run up to the election.

I covered several events on the Kenyan elections for Africa in DC.  I predicted that Continue reading →

Paying Jihadists in West Africa: Straining American – French Relations?

22 Monday Apr 2013

Posted by africaindc in Analysis, DC Corridors of Power, News, Uncategorized

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Boko Haram, Laurent Fabius, Moulin - Fournier, Niger Drone Base, Sahel crisis, Vicki Huddleston

The leading BBC article on Africa this weekend tells of the release of a French family of seven (3 adults, 4 children) who had been kidnapped by Boko Haram in northern Cameroon two months ago.

Despite recent claims by a former US ambassador to Mali and Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, Vicki Huddleston, that France has paid almost $100 million in ransoms to secure the release of its citizens held hostage in the Sahel, France denies paying a ransom to Boko Haram to secure the release of the Moulin – Fournier family.

The French Foreign Minister, in a not particularly useful statement following the release of the hostages apparently stated that the Moulin – Fournier’s were released in an area ‘between’ Nigeria and Cameroon.

Even before the recent raid on the In Amenas gas plant in Algeria that resulted in the deaths of dozens of hostages and much criticism of the Algerian government, France lost several of its nationals during its own failed rescue attempts in Mali and Niger.  The crisis in the Sahel must be straining relations between the US and France, the question is to what extent.  The unilateral intervention in Mali, the decision of the US to establish a drone base in Niger where French influence has traditionally held sway, and the ransom issue are all possible issues of antagonism.

If it wasn’t money, anyone out there have any idea what sort of benevolence may have motivated Boko Haram to release the hostages?

DC Corridors of Power – Fashionable Mali

21 Monday Jan 2013

Posted by africaindc in DC Corridors of Power

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Africa Society, Al-Qaeda, allafrica.com, Mali, Sahel crisis

With some extra time over the long weekend, I was able to spend a bit more time on the comprehensive Africa news service, AllAfrica.com than usual.

One of the more interesting pieces I stumbled across was a guest column by Bernadette Paolo of the Africa Society and Vivian Lowry Derryck of the Bridges Institute.  While I have briefly met Ms. Paolo (she is a prominent presence at the more mainstream, high powered African events inside the beltway), I must confess to complete ignorance of the existence of the Ms. Derryck and the later organization.

The column, “Mali: Test of US Will in Mali Conflict”, while somewhat redundantly titled, does indeed discuss the curious lack of American involvement in the current situation, which is curious, given that for several years (even before I was a Peace Corps volunteer in the Sahel) US military forces were training Malians in counter-terrorism tactic.  Rather predictably, the Paolo-Derryck piece combines appeals to the humanitarian (mention of refugees) and the security conscious (mention of Al-Qaeda).

Unfortunately, and symptomatic of much political analysis, the opinion piece does not discuss much more than that.  While one certainly recognizes space limitations, ignoring the precarious nature of the interim government in Bamako and the prior US support for counter-terrorism efforts in the Sahel and Mali in particular is a significant omission.  This omission is symptomatic of the typical US efforts in the region – supporting engagements that respond to the scenarios en vogue at the moment (an ‘Invisible Children Doctrine’).  Will should be long term, not merely in response to drastic events.

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