Libya Has Become ‘The New Mali’ as Arab Terrorists Shift in Sahara

Posted by Unknown Senin, 03 Juni 2013 0 komentar
AFRICANGLOBE – Suicide attacks on a French-run mine and a military base in northern Niger have shown how an Arab terrorist threat is spreading across the weak nations of the Sahara, meaning France may be tied down there for years to come.
Regional rivalries are aggravating the problem for Paris and its Western countries, with a lack of cooperation between Saharan countries helping terrorists to melt away when they come under pressure and regroup in quieter parts of the vast desert.
Security officials say lawless southern Libya has become the latest haven for al Qaeda-linked fighters after French-led forces drove them from strongholds in northern Mali this year, killing hundreds.
“The south of Libya is what the north of Mali was like before,” said a senior adviser to Mali’s interim President Diouncounda Traore, asking not to be named.
Niger has said last week’s suicide raids, which killed 25 people at the army base and desert uranium mine run by France’s Areva, were launched from Libya. Amid growing tensions between the two countries, Libya has denied this.
Chad, which played a leading role in the Mali campaign, said a man was shot dead in an attack on its consulate in the Libyan desert town of Sabha at the weekend.
Smugglers have long used Libya’s poorly patrolled south – a crossroads of routes to Chad, Niger and Algeria – for trafficking drugs, contraband cigarettes and people to Europe.
But the overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011 flooded the Sahara with pillaged weapons and ammunition. Tuareg terrorists used them to seize power in northern Mali, only to be ousted by even better-armed Arab Islamists who set up training camps and imposed barbaric Islamic law until the African, Malian and French forces arrived.
The terrorists have also exploited Libya’s weakness. Veteran al Qaeda commander Moktar Belmokhtar bought weapons there after Gaddafi’s fall and his fighters passed through southern Libya to carry out a mass hostage-taking at an Algerian gas plant in January, in which 37 foreigners died.
A spokesman for the MUJWA, an al Qaeda-linked group which controlled parts of Mali last year, told Mauritania’s al Akhbar news site that the Niger attack was not prepared in southern Libya. But Belmokhtar’s group said it also took part.
With no effective national army, Libya relies on local brigades to police its southern border region where at least 100 people died in ethnic violence last year. Tripoli’s failure to restore security there may be encouraging permanent Islamist camps and weapons stores, security officials say.
France, which relies on neighbouring Niger for one fifth of the uranium powering its nuclear reactors, has urged regional powers to cooperate to tackle the threat from Libya.
“We’re extremely concerned that what’s happening in southern Libya could replicate what happened in Mali,” a French diplomatic source said, adding that the defence minister had raised the issue on a recent visit to Washington and London. “Dealing with that problem needs to be fast-tracked.”
Paris is keen to cut its troop numbers in the region. But, amid persistent bickering and mistrust among regional powers, President Francois Hollande admitted last week that French forces may have be used elsewhere in the Sahel.
Alarmed European governments also approved a 110-man mission this week to improve border security by training Libyan police and security forces. But Paris feels this is being deployed too slowly, given the urgency of the situation.“As much as the West may wish to leave the problem to Africans, it cannot,” said Vicki Huddleston, a former U.S. ambassador to Mali. “Islamists will continue to fight until defeated by the region working together and supported by Western governments.”
Lack of Cooperation
Sahel photo
The Sahel region of Africa
Borders often have little meaning in a desert where militants can blend in with nomads, and hunting terrorists requires states riven by mutual suspicion to work together.
Algeria, the Sahara’s main military power, has long bristled at the idea of outside intervention in the region, particularly one led by its former colonial ruler, France.
It allowed French war planes operating in Mali to fly over its territory. But the Malian official said Algeria had to be more active, whether by arresting militants or preventing the flow of fuel that allows them to cover vast desert distances – the northern Mali town of Gao lies about 1,500 km (930 miles) from the border of southern Libya.
“Algeria’s cooperation is essential but they are not on the frontline,” he said.
Mauritania also needed to do more because of its strategic location on the western edge of the Sahara, the high number of its citizens who are senior militants, and its experience in tackling terrorists at home, he said.
U.S. officials said efforts to tackle the spreading influence of al Qaeda’s Sahara branch had been beset by long-standing rivalries, notably between Morocco and Algeria, and a lack of trust and communication between regional capitals.
Plans to set up a Saharan anti-terrorist command center in southern Algeria never materialised. A low point, officials in Mali’s interim government say, was reached in 2011 when senior figures in the previous administration leaked the positions of Mauritanian troops attacking al Qaeda bases in Mali.
Relations between Mali and Mauritania had already soured in 2010 when Bamako released a Mauritanian al Qaeda commander in return for a kidnapped hostage, prompting Nouakchott to recall its ambassador.
The changing face of Srab terrorism creates particular problems for governments. For years Al Qaeda’s North African wing AQIM relied largely on Algerians but they were joined last year by gunmen from across northern and parts of West Africa.
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Judul: Libya Has Become ‘The New Mali’ as Arab Terrorists Shift in Sahara
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