Bamako — France's planned military withdrawal from
Mali has opened the door to talks between the Malian government and
Al-Qaeda-affiliated
Islamist extremists, which many hope could stem the violence in the Sahel
state.
اضافة اعلان
Mali, a landlocked nation of 21 million people, has
struggled to contain a brutal extremist insurgency that emerged in 2012, before
spreading to neighboring
Burkina Faso and Niger.
Thousands of soldiers and civilians have been killed and 2
million people have been displaced by the Sahel-wide conflict, of which Mali
remains the epicenter.
Analysts have long argued that there is no military solution
to the conflict and many support engaging the fundamentalists in dialogue in
order to break the cycle of violence.
However France, which intervened in Mali in 2013 to combat
the extremist militants, has long opposed dialogue.
"With terrorists, we don't discuss. We fight,"
French President
Emmanuel Macron told the Jeune Afrique magazine in 2020.
On Thursday, Macron announced that he was withdrawing French
troops from Mali due to a conflict with the country's ruling military junta.
The possibility of dialogue with the extremists has now
resurfaced.
Shortly after the announcement of the French pullout, the
International Crisis Group said that "political dialogue should be
considered with some jihadist leaders" to address insecurity.
Advocates of dialogue for the most part argue that the
Islamic State group should be excluded.
Iyad Ag Ghaly, the leader of the Al-Qaeda-affiliated GSIM
group, has previously said that he is open to talks with the Malian government
— but only if French and
UN troops leave the country.
Moment of opportunity
The prospect of dialogue with fundamentalists has long
loomed over Malian politics.
In 2020, ex-president
Ibrahim Boubacar Keita said he had
sent emissaries to two of Mali's main extremist leaders, including Iyad Ag
Ghaly.
The move followed two nationwide consultations in 2017 and
2019 that recommended talks.
Keita was subsequently ousted in a military coup in August
2020, after weeks of protests fuelled in part by frustration over a lack of
progress against the grinding conflict.
However, Mali's new ruling junta also appears open to talks.
In October 2021, the army-installed prime minister Choguel
Kokalla Maiga likened Mali's situation to Afghanistan's, pointing out that
Washington had engaged the Taliban in talks.
"Why not do the same here?" he asked.
Ornella Moderan of the Institute for Security Studies think
tank said that the current moment represents an "opportunity".
But she also warned Mali is "much more bellicose"
than before.
Mali's junta has recently proclaimed military victories
against the extremists, after years of suffering devastating attacks.
The announcements have coincided with what the US, France
and others say is the arrival of paramilitaries from the Russian private
security firm Wagner in Mali.
However Mali's junta denies Wagner's presence.
Existing contacts
How the talks with
Islamist extremists might work, and when
they might begin, remains unclear.
Malian researcher Boubacar Haidara suggested that Mali's
government would only want to initiate dialogue when it is in a strong
negotiating position.
In December, the International Crisis Group said that
neither Mali's government nor
GSIM had determined how to conduct negotiations —
or "which compromises they might be willing to accept".
The challenges facing such talks are daunting, yet the
government in Bamako and the extremists have long maintained informal contact.
Malian authorities have used religious leaders as
go-betweens to negotiate hostage releases, for example. And in the volatile
north, some government officials have cooperated with traditional Islamic judges
linked to Al-Qaeda.
A senior member of a militant group, who requested
anonymity, told AFP that dialogue was already present at a local level.
"But nobody wants to endorse it politically or
publicly," he said.
Influential imam Mahmoud Dicko — who has passed government
messages to fundamentalist groups — told a press conference this month that he
is "ready to reactivate".
Read more Region and World