European concerns grow about Al Qaeda's presence in the Sahel
Recently several European officials have visited the Sahel to discuss concerns about Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) with Sahelian governments.
These visits demonstrate European governments鈥 continued engagement with the issue of AQIM, particularly its kidnapping activities. Concerns about AQIM are intensifying in the wake of Osama bin Laden鈥檚 death and the ongoing civil war in Libya.
Last week, Spanish secretary of state for security Antonio Camacho met with his counterparts in Mauritania, Mali, and Niger.
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In Mauritania, where Mr. Camacho also discussed illegal immigration, he made plans to enhance :
Camacho discussed ways to establish new forms of support, either bilaterally or multilaterally, so as to address the threats, stressing the strategic importance that Spain sees in co-operation with Mauritania.
Both sides agreed to create a 鈥渏oint team for co-operation among police agencies in the fight against drug trafficking鈥. They also explored the possibility of tightening border control, promoting co-operation and development between the two countries, according to the statement.
Spain鈥檚 stake in the problem of AQIM increased after militants kidnapped three Spanish aid workers in 2009. The hostages were 鈥渁fter the Spanish state reportedly paid 7 to 8 million euros ($10 to $12 million).鈥
This week, two French members of parliament are making a similar :
Henri Pagnol, of the ruling UMP party, and Francois Loncle, of the opposition Socialist Party, said they were on their way back from the Mauritanian capital Nouakchott and would head for the Malian capital Bamako later in the day.
Loncle said the team, which also plans to visit Niger, Burkina Faso and Algeria in June, will assess the impact of the activities of Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) on regional countries and 鈥渢he role of France鈥 in the fight against the extremist organisation.
In Nouakchott, the French MPs met with President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz and several of his ministers as well as with opposition chief Ahmed Ould Daddah and French military officials.
France has a substantial stake in the problem, too.
A number of AQIM鈥檚 kidnapping victims have been French citizens, including two young men who died near the Niger-Mali border in January and four Frenchmen still held by AQIM. Some experts believe that Osama bin Laden鈥檚 death has increased the likelihood that the latter captives will come to harm if AQIM decides to commit an act of symbolic retaliation.
Whatever the case, negotiations over the hostages have so far come to naught, and clearly French politicians are worried about the hostages鈥 fate and the trajectory of AQIM in general.
These European visits come as Sahelian governments, who are themselves increasingly worried about AQIM, are pursuing greater cooperation amongst themselves and with Algeria. Financial support and political engagement on the part of Spain and France could enhance some of the Sahelian governments鈥 counterterrorism efforts, and could also draw European governments even more deeply into Sahelian affairs and politics.
鈥 Alex Thurston is a PhD student studying Islam in Africa at Northwestern University and blogs at .
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