But two decades of peace were upended in January, setting
off a chain of events that has brought a severe version of Shariah law into the
region.
All of a sudden, hundreds of thousands of Malians are
suffering greatly under the yoke of Islamist militants. And considering the
unrest that has spread like wildfire across the Middle East
and North Africa only recently, the world should be
paying close attention to this landlocked, semi-arid country of 15 million
people.
TimeTo Talk
At the U.N. General Assembly in New
York City , Mali
figures prominently on the loaded agenda. U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon
held a meeting to discuss the issue on Wednesday.
"The Sahel [a belt of land below
the Sahara desert] is at a critical juncture. Political
turmoil, extreme climatic conditions and fragile economies are combining to
create a perfect storm of vulnerability,” he said in a statement. “The people
and governments of
the region need urgent international support.”
But that support has been a long time coming. A Human Rights
Watch, or HRW, repor treleased on Tuesday found severe human rights abuses
are taking place in northern Mali
every day.
“The Islamist armed groups have become increasingly
repressive as they have tightened their grip over northern Mali ,”
said Corinne Dufka, senior Africa researcher at HRW,
according to the report .
“Stonings, amputations and floggings have become the order
of the day in an apparent attempt to force the local population to accept their
world view. In imposing their brand of Shariah law, they have also meted out a
tragically cruel parody of justice and recruited and armed children as young as
12.”
In wide-ranging interviews with HRW, witnesses described
countless restrictive policies and harsh punishments. Smoking, drinking, socializing,
revealing skin in public -- all of these once-acceptable acts are now met with
brutally severe penalties.
Months Of Mayhem
The Islamist takeover is only the latest chapter in a series
of major upsets in Mali
this year.
It all began with an invasion by the Tuaregs, a stateless
ethnic group. Many had acquired new weaponry when they were drafted to fight
for Moammar Gadhafi during the Libyan revolution of 2011. Swooping in from the Sahel ,
these armed nomads made significant inroads into northern Mali
this January.
This eventually prompted a military coup down south, in Mali 's
capital city of Bamako .
A group of mid-ranking army members stormed the palace there
in late March, voicing disappointment over the civilian government’s weakness
in the face of Tuareg rebellions. But the poorly organized junta made no
progress of its own against the invaders -- to this day, a chunk of northern Mali
the size of France
is beyond the reach of Bamako .
That’s not to say the Tuaregs were successful in their bid
for an independent state. They were quickly usurped by the Islamist
groups who followed them into northern Mali
and have since imposed a severe version of Shariah law.
There are now two main groups who wield power in northern Mali :
Ansar Dine and the Movement for Unity and Jihad in West Africa ,
or MUJAO. Both outfits are associated with an umbrella group called al Qaeda in
the Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM.
Law Of The Land
AQIM was officially formed in 2007, but its origins can be
loosely traced further back to the Islamist rebel groups who fought and lost in
the bloody Algerian civil war of the 1990s. Widely spread and loosely
organized, these militants have posed only a minimal threat to the outside
world for most of the last two decades.
But now that Mali
has emerged as a base of operations,
AQIM is gaining broader influence. They have been linked to groups outside of Mali ,
including Ansar al-Shariah, the Libyan-based organization whose members were
accused of perpetrating the Benghazi
attacks that killed four American diplomats this month.
The expansion of AQIM’s sphere of influence beyond the Maghreb
is a major cause for concern. But for now, northern Mali
is bearing the brunt of the suffering as communities struggle to adjust to the
extremists’ brutal new system of justice.
The insurgents of Ansar Dine have control over the cities of
Timbuktu and Kidal, while MUJAO is
in charge of Gao and surrounding areas. MUJAO is the more extremist group,
though both towns now operate according to Shariah law.
“When we’re young, we should enjoy our youth,” said one Malian driver to HRW. “We want to dance, listen
to music, flirt with women, smoke, drink tea with our friends, but with [the
new leaders], we can’t do anything.”
A young woman also bemoaned the loss of her rights in
northern Mali .
“The north feels dead,” she said. “As a woman, I can’t dress
up, wear perfume, go for a stroll with my friends. ... They’ve even outlawed
chatting in groups. They say instead of talking we should go home and read the
Quran.”
Both of these northern Malians have fled their homes and now
reside in Bamako ; they are just two
of the hundreds of thousands of northern Malians who have been displaced from
their communities. Those who remain must deal with widespread food
insecurities, especially since the presence of rebels has drastically hindered
aid organizations from working in the region.
Outside Looking In
Meanwhile, international powers are wringing their hands.
The African Union, the Economic
Community of West African States, or Ecowas, and the United Nations are still
deciding how -- or whether -- to send troops to support Bamako .
An agreement was reached this week whereby Mali
will accept 3,000 Ecowas troops in Bamako
to help Mali
defeat the insurgents, but this is pending approval from the Security Council
of the United Nations.
Ban Ki-moon’s comments in New York City
were in support of Malians’ sovereignty, but he urged prudence first and
foremost.
“Any proposed military solution to the security crisis in
northern Mali
should be considered extremely carefully,” he said. “This could have
significant humanitarian consequences, including further displacement and
restrictions on humanitarian access."
This concern is warranted, hence the reticence of the Security
Council, which has already vetoed an earlier plan for intervention in Mali
due to a lack of details and has yet to approve of Bamako ’s
latest agreement with Ecowas.
But until a comprehensive plan can be drafted and approved,
hundreds of thousands of northern Malians will continue to suffer at the hands
of their new leaders.
“We’re Muslims, good and faithful Muslims,” said one young
Malian to HRW. “But honestly, these people have taken all the joie de
vivre from our lives.”
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