What does resilience against radicalisation and violent extremism look like in Mali and the Sahel? And which drivers are present for the spread of extremism?
Mali has faced several massive crises in the last decades. The country has experienced three military coups in just under ten years; it has seen an increase in armed Islamist attacks on civilians, and more than 385 000 citizens are internally displaced, according to Human Rights Watch.
Although life is going about its daily routine in the capital Bamako, other parts of Mali are currently engulfed in a deadly conflict between different Jihadi insurgencies and the armed forces of the Malian state. Since 2012, the history of Mali has been one of violent extremism in the form of Jihadi insurgents, but there is much more to this story than headlines of violence and destruction.
Resilience and drivers in Mali
In this episode of the The World Stage, Abdoul Wakhab Cissé and Morten Bøås are sitting at the bed of the Niger River. This mighty waterway floats from the high plains of Guinea through Mali and Niger before it makes its way to the Atlantic Ocean through Nigeria. They are discussing the manifestation of violent extremism in Mali and neighbouring Sahel countries like Niger and Burkina Faso.
Mali and the Sahel are often talked about as enabling environments – meaning that all the factors that, according to the literature, are conducive to the emergence of violent extremism seem to be present – but how does the reality look in this respect?
What is the role of the state, state repression and heavy-handed state responses? What is the role of religion as a driver? What promotes resilience? What does the future hold for Mali and the Sahel?