Concerning the current and persisting crisis going on in Mali, Willy Nyamitwe, the Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Ambassador of the Republic of Burundi; also the Senior Adviser in charge of Media and Communication to the President of Burundi, took to his twitter page that:
Protest in Mali
#Burundi did not want to get there by refusing, by all means, the kind of invasion forces that create, fuel and maintain hotbeds of tension to drag on in a country to plunder its mineral resources. #Mali - paying a heavy bill.
Crisis in Mali
Mali crisis worsens as hundreds of thousands flee militia attacks
More than 200,000 people have been displaced since start of 2019 and about 600 killed
Hundreds of thousands of people are fleeing their homes in Mali, where deadly attacks on villages are destabilising an already critical situation in the country’s centre.
More than 200,000 people have fled since the start of the year, almost six times the number that were displaced in the same period last year, according to the Rapid Response Mechanism, a tracking and alert system that helps humanitarian organisations respond to vulnerable people.
Nearly 600 civilians were killed in the first half of 2019, most of them in the central region of Mopti, where villagers including many women and children have borne the brunt of gruesome attacks attributed to ethnic militias.
Herdsmen
from the nomadic Fulani ethnic group and hunters from the more settled Dogon
have been blamed for these attacks, though neither side has claimed them.
Though
there are constant smaller-scale attacks, the most deadly of them were in
March, when at least 157 people in Ogossogou lost their lives, and in
June, when the mayor of Sobame Da said 95 people had been killed, before the governor revised it down to 35. The true total is
still unknown, though an unverified list of 101 names of the dead was
circulated on Wednesday.
Civilians
say communities are attacking each other, while the military and armed groups
are also fighting. The result is a perfect storm in which those mostly affected
are the most vulnerable, such as women and children.
“The
first victims of this cycle of violence are civilians,” said the Norwegian
Refugee Council’s Hassane Hamadou. “They are killed, they are maimed, they are
threatened; and their only chance of survival is to flee. Today, people are
caught between armed groups, self-defence militias and military forces.”
In a
centre sheltering more than 800 women and children in Bandiagara, the mayor of
Doucoumbo, Bogo Kassogué, called on the government to respond to the crisis so
that everyone could go home and carry on with their lives.
“We
have enormous difficulties in this centre – difficulties concerning food, water
and hygiene. Each day, more villagers arrive,” he said. “The people arrived
here on 20 June so they’ve been here for one week now. There isn’t even enough
space to sleep and move.”
There
are two other centres in Bandiagara, where conditions are dire, with families
huddled in the shadow cast by a wall in the centre, which has only one latrine.
But
Yadigné Djiguiba, a 35-year-old mother of five, said there was no way she could
go home, considering what she had seen and experienced.
“We
fled because it wasn’t safe. There were killings, gunshots and also the
presence of armed men,” she said. “As long as they are there, we do not want to
go back.”
The attacks in the centre
are adding to a crisis in the north that began in 2012 and led to the
government losing control of vast swathes of the desert. The humanitarian
situation across the country remains critical. Nearly 550,000 people are in
urgent need of food, and more than 900 schools are closed.
The
UN’s peacekeeping mission in Mali has
just had its mandate renewed, and although it pledges to protect civilians,
researchers say in practice it does not allow its troops to pre-emptively
disarm communities.
Meanwhile,
the Fulani accuse the government of supporting the Dogon militias, although
there is no concrete evidence they are providing funding.
Yvan
Guichaoua, a specialist in rebellions and the rise of jihadism in the Sahel,
said the Malian government was creating monsters it could not control.
“The
government doesn’t have the capacity to impose its own will,” he said. “So they
somehow use loyal groups, but these loyal groups then become something else and
start making political claims. What happened in the north, with all the
mushrooming of different armed groups, is now also happening in the centre. And
this is not about to end.”
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