Jump to navigation

Leaders launch regional defence force despite juntas’ absence

Tough negotiations between civilian and military regimes lie ahead to mend fences and resume security cooperation

The political and security schisms in the Sahel have intensified as relations between the three military ruled states – Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger – and the regional bloc, the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas), have ruptured further. Political leaders in the civilian governments in Ecowas are trying to persuade the juntas to resume cooperation as the insurgencies in the Sahelian states threaten to spread to the coastal areas. The Global Terrorism Index identified Africa's Sahel region as the global epicenter of extremism – accounting for half of all terror-related fatalities in 2024.

Defence chiefs in Ecowas have agreed to deploy a 5,000-strong anti-terrorism regional force to contain a ten-fold increase in terror related deaths since 2019. Nigerian Defence Minister Mohammed Badaru Abubakar announced the activation of a standby military force on 11 March on the sidelines of an Ecowas security forum.

The force is part of a broader regional strategy to curb terrorism and cross-border crime. It ‘underscores our collective determination to confront the stretch of terrorism and insecurity and to ensure the safety and security of our citizens,’ said Abubakar. The immediate problem for the force is that three of the countries suffering the worst Islamic terror attacks – Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso – are outside Ecowas (AC Vol 65 No 14, The juntas dig in as instability worsens).

Ghanaian President John Dramani Mahama has stepped up his efforts to reconcile the three juntas, who quit Ecowas to set up the breakaway Alliance of Sahel States, with the regional bloc (AC Vol 66 No 3, Sahel-exit tests western miners and Russia’s military muscle). Mahama visited Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso on 9 and 10 March, saying at a press conference in Bamako with Mali’s Gen Assimi Goïta that there had been ‘a breakdown in trust’ and promising that ‘we will do everything possible to restore this trust.’

In Burkina Faso, following talks with interim leader Captain Ibrahim Traoré on security cooperation, including intelligence-sharing and joint military initiatives, Mahama told journalists that he had a ‘fresh perspective on Burkina Faso’s concerns regarding its relationship with Ecowas.’



Related Articles

The Presidents' club backs Keïta

An emergency summit has given full backing to the President but leaves grave doubts about his chances of forming a national unity government

The 27 July online summit of West African leaders has given full, emphatic backing to President Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta (IBK) in his confrontation with the opposition and threatened...


Less than economic

West Africa's economic club has won one war and begun another

Charles Taylor, Liberia's new President, paid the supreme compliment: 'But for the stern commitment of Ecowas, we may still have been at war'. At its 20th summit in...


Jihad's shifting fronts

Increasing the resources available to anti-jihad forces is having little effect on the growth in attacks and militant cells

Jihadism was concentrated in northern Mali at the time of the launch of Opération Serval, France's emergency military campaign to stop jihadist columns pushing south in 2013....