The power of drug money in Mali
Transcription
The power of drug money in Mali
The power of drug money in Mali Christian Aid Occasional Paper Christina Anderson October 2015 The power of drug money in Mali Contents 1 Contents PREFACE INTRODUCTION: COCAINEBOUGOU AND ITS CASTLES IN THE SAND Armed groups in northern Mali and the Sahara PART 1: SMUGGLING IN WEST AFRICA AND MALI Hal ! l and har ! m smuggling Drugs smuggling in West Africa Drugs smuggling in Mali New trafficking routes Key players and beneficiaries in the drug trade The money: Who spends it and what on? Conclusion PART 2: CRIMINALS, TERRORISTS AND THE CORROSION OF DEMOCRACY Why did Mali’s government crumble so quickly? Government toleration of drug smuggling Religion-inspired militants, criminals, or both? How AQIM and MUJAO embed themselves in communities Joining the dots: government, drugs, terrorists and instability Conclusion PART 3: TACKLING THE GOVERNANCE CHALLENGES A culture of corruption The fight against corruption The rise and fall of Touré PART 4: CONCLUSION: REASON FOR HOPE APPENDIX: INITIATIVES THAT DEAL WITH THE WEST AFRICAN DRUGS TRADE REFERENCES ENDNOTES Acknowledgements: Christina A nderson is a research and com munications consultant, based in G eneva, S w itzerland. She has w orked for international aid organisations in Latin A m erica, Europe and southern Africa for over 15 years. This case study w as independently com missioned by the Joliba Trust as a policy and advocacy paper for its o w n use, but subsequently contributed to Christian Aid’s research. Joliba Trust supports grassroots developm ent w ork w ith farming and cattle-raising com munities in central M ali. Its focus is on projects to help w om en and environm ental w ork to sustain rural livelihoods in marginal areas affected by desertification. Disclaimer: O Ps are published in the nam e of the author(s). Their vie w s do not necessarily reflect those of Christian Aid and should not be so attributed. Christian Aid’s O ccasional Paper (O P) series reflects w ork carried out by Christian Aid staff and others on a range of developm ent topics. Although O Ps are addressed to an audience that includes policy makers, acade mics, the m edia, other non-governm ental organisations and the general public, som e prior kno w ledge of the topic may be ne eded to understand fully som e of the papers. 2 3 3 6 6 6 7 8 8 9 10 11 11 13 13 14 15 16 17 17 18 19 20 21 23 25 The power of drug money in Mali Preface 2 Preface In the 18th century, according to historian Thomas Gallant, there w ere pirate lairs and enclaves in different parts of the world that gre w to becom e regional market centres and entrepôts in their ow n right.1 From tow ns and settle m ents in the Indian O cean to pirate territories in the Caribbean, these centres becam e established as suppliers of various illicit products and gains – from stolen gold, silver and porcelain; to tobacco, alcohol, opium and arms; to slaves and associated criminal services. In tim e, pirates from the Caribbean becam e a ‘major economic force supplying urban markets in North A m erica’. In the Indian O cean, continues Gallant, so vital w ere pirates to trade that their com m erce in the region w as called ‘arm ed trading’, at par or comparable to regular trade on the seas. Their activity helped connect their enclaves in rural villages or re mote coastal hide-outs with outside markets. This m eans, for example, that they created direct and indirect e mploym ent opportunities for far-flung com munities that would other wise have nothing to rely on. They becam e niche suppliers of products and services that normal, legitimate businesses won’t touch, but w hich w ere in de mand from pow erful custom ers located in major capitals. They created business for bankers w ho took their gold, shipbuilders w ho built and repaired their corsairs, and m erchants w ho sold the m cannons, gunpowder or information. Thus, Gallant concludes, although they w ere outlaw s hunted by law enforcers, pirates played a key role – w hether for good or bad – in the global economy. This case study reveals similar patterns, but instead of pirates on the high seas, it examines the cam el-riding or 4x4-driving inhabitants of the Sahara. These conte mporary groups have turned other wise isolated settle m ents and mobile trading caravans in the desert into bazaars for smuggled goods – from ‘soft goods’ such as sugar, fuel and staples, to ‘harder’ com modities such as cigarettes, mobile phones and Viagra. But the bazaars are often also bases for hiding and for w arding illicit m erchandise – such as w eapons, am munition and narcotic drugs, mainly cocaine and cannabis resin. So vital are these modern-day ‘pirates’ to trade in the desert, that their com m erce can also be called ‘arm ed trading’. And the treasures they bring are no longer that hidden – until the 2012 insurgency in northern M ali they w ere e mbodied and symbolised in luxury-mansion districts such as ‘Cocainebougou’, or Cocaine Tow n, w hich have sprouted in the desert. In recent years they had becom e increasingly adept at converting stolen or smuggled goods into other forms of w ealth, w hich add real value to the local economy. The power of drug money in Mali Introduction 3 Introduction: Cocainebougou and its castles in the sand M uch still ne eds to be learned about these modern-day brigands. This report m erely provides one explanation for their e m ergence and an introduction to the contexts in w hich they operate. It also helps to explain the relationships of competition, collaboration or corruption bet w e en smugglers and the state, smugglers and local com munities, and smugglers and the assortm ent of arm ed groups in the desert. In northern M ali one can find evidence of these complex relationships: not only agents of the state behaving like criminals, but also criminals behaving like the state. There are not only criminals taking up the mantle of militancy and fundam entalism and trying to be ‘political’, but also political terrorists engaging in illicit enterprise and trying to be criminal, often with great success. W hat, then, can developm ent agencies do about such underlying politics? How can they ‘straighten the crooked’, so to speak? A first step is to acknowledge the existence of a peculiar form of politics and set of relationships, w hich drove much of the conflict in northern M ali. Useful questions could then be asked w hen designing governance interventions. For example, how is the highly lucrative cocaine economy reshaping social and political relationships in the country? W hat informal or hidden structures and relationships of pow er ne ed to be examined? Do the usual conflict analyses and conflict-sensitive program ming apply as much for situations with a high incidence of organised criminality and corruption? How does one engage with institutions that are probably built on foundations of illegal activity and illicit behaviour? W hat could be done about criminal markets else w here in the world that create the de mand for the services of smugglers in the Sahara? Until all-out conflict erupted in early 2012, tourism had be en a mainstay of northern M ali’s economy, creating jobs and generating significant incom e. 2 A popular stop on the tourist trail w as the ancient tow n of Gao, know n not just for the famous Askia tombs and the Pink Dune, but for a district on the edge of the tow n nicknam ed ‘Cocainebougou’, or Cocaine Tow n, after the source of its w ealth. H ere, fourstorey mansions, surrounded by ornam ental fences, and graced with fake marble pillars and huge bronze friezes, stood in marked contrast to the desert that surrounds the m. 3 Cocainebougou is not unique. Timbuktu, another ancient tow n about 320km east from Gao, had a similar district, w here ostentatious displays of w ealth, widely assum ed to have be en earned from drugs trafficking, w ere com mon. B efore the conflict, a smuggler told journalist Afua Hirsch that the presence of drug chiefs in Timbuktu ‘is an open secret’, and that they w ere the ones w ho provided visiting senior officials of the previous governm ent with 36 brand ne w 4x4 vehicles. 4 And 2,000km along the truck trade route north from Gao, in the Algerian border tow n of Tamanrasset, is the district of Sersou F erraille. Five or six years ago, the ow ners of the large houses there, w hich sit behind heavy m etal gates, had nothing. They w ere able to acquire gleaming mansions, with w alls covered in imported tiles, columns and marble flooring, crystal chandeliers, and the latest air conditioning and furniture from Europe. 5 It is widely acknowledged that many houses in these districts w ere built on the proce eds of trafficking in narcotics. Along with kidnapping-for-ransom, it w as considered the most lucrative business in the region and reportedly still is. The fortunes of drug smugglers in the deserts of northern M ali are often associated with instability – that it is instability w hich allow s the m to engage in their profitable trade. But instability could be bad for the smugglers too. For example, w hen the tide turned against the insurgents in northern M ali shortly before French and Chadian troops retook Gao in late January 2013, Arab businessm en and drug traffickers associated with the insurgents fled in fear for their lives and their mansions w ere ransacked and looted. The mansions of Cocainebougou w ere, literally and figuratively, castles in the sand that could easily be sw ept aw ay. Yet their ow ners re mained far more resilient. Just t wo w e eks after the French arrived, Gao’s mayor, Sadou Diallo, according to a widely quoted report, allow ed t wo alleged drug smugglers to stay in his hom e. 6 O utsiders, and developm ent agencies in particular, are still largely ignorant of the unprecedented expansion of drugs trafficking in W est Africa. So far, it is mainly security specialists and acade mics w ho are analysing it. Examining the e m ergence of luxury mansion districts, such as Cocainebougou and its counterparts in Timbuktu and Armed groups in northern Mali and the Sahara This case study does not provide full answ ers, not only because these questions are difficult, but also because they ought to be answ ered by the developm ent agencies that se ek to eradicate poverty in the Sahel. Hopefully in this case study, a contribution by the Joliba Trust and Christian Aid to the discussions, doors will be opened to those answ ers. AQIM – Al- Q aida in the Islamic M aghreb and its offshoots are considered the primary transnational terror threats in North and W est Africa. It traces its origins to the guerrilla Islamist move m ent in Algeria in the 1990s w hich splintered but regrouped in the early 2000s and aligned itself with al- Q aida. Although organised criminality has e m erged to be today’s principal governance challenge, it is not cast in stone. It is constantly contested and renegotiated, and adapts continually to changing conditions, as the story in northern M ali over the past t wo years show s. MUJAO – French acronym for ‘ M ove m ent for Unity and Jihad in W est Africa’, an offshoot of A QIM . Its leadership is mostly black Africans, in contrast to the largely northern Arab leadership of A QIM . M UJA O m e mbers are know n to be directly engaged in smuggling and illicit activities. D evelopm ent agencies have an increasingly urgent role to play in contexts like northern M ali. This case study challenges the m to take the first steps. Ansar Eddine – or ‘D efenders of the Faith’, is another A QIM off-shoot, founded in 2011 by the M alian Tuareg Iyad Ag Ghali. The group w as set up as a hom e-grow n jihadist organisation in northern M ali. Al Murabitun – or ‘The Sentinels’, the nam e adopted by the 2013 m erger of Gao-based groups M UJA O and the Signed in Blood Battalion associated with M okhtar B elmokhtar. MNLA – French acronym for ‘National M ove m ent for the Liberation of A zaw ad’. M NL A is the main group espousing secession from M ali and establishing the ne w nation-state of A zaw ad, and is dominated by Tuaregs. Front Islamique Arabe de l’Azawad – a group that e m erged in the 1990s espousing a secessionist agenda and is draw n mainly from the Hassani Arab minority. The power of drug money in Mali Introduction 4 Tamanrasset, is a useful first step to decode and interpret w hat is going on. These ‘castles in the sand’ are symbolic of many things. In the eyes of many locals they loom as proof that big and quick money, even if risky, can be made outside traditional employment and ‘slow-grow th development’. The drugs trade and its profits may be har!m or forbidden, but over time they can become their ow n justification, especially when they develop to be the major source of income and employment in impoverished communities. It also demonstrates how illicit money can link otherwise isolated local communities in the desert to the global economy: paying for goods ranging from traditional staples for survival such as pasta, semolina, powdered milk and petrol, to the more ‘globalised’ products such as mobile phones, satellite T V and 4x4 vehicles. Perhaps most importantly, Cocainebougou shows the pow er of drug money – how governance is bent to accommodate the interests of traffickers and how corruption grows in the distribution of the spoils. The reasons behind the grow th of drug trafficking may be the key to understanding poverty and governance challenges in the Sahel region. H ere are thre e possible reasons – an economic, a social and a political reason – for the grow th of drugs trafficking in M ali and W est Africa, w hich developm ent agencies ne ed to consider. 1. The benefits of illicit trading, though risky and often morally frowned upon, have become widely perceived as far outweighing the benefits of slow-change traditional development or income-generating activities. The benefits of illicit trade are not just the obvious and conspicuous face-value gains, such as the castles in the sand of Cocainebougou. They also include unprecedented social mobility, higher standing within social hierarchies, and long-term security for the individuals and com munities both directly and indirectly involved. LIBYA EGYPT MALI NIGER COCAINE FROM SOUTH AMERICA AQIM and allies NIGERIA CHAD SUDAN ETHIOPIA Boko Haram Al-Shabab Trafficking routes HEROIN FROM ASIA Drug smuggling may be considered by local com munities as har !m (illicit or sinful) and inherently destructive both to society and the traders w ho engage in it. But w hen even notorious drug smugglers invest their gains in widely recognised symbols of legitimacy, such as marriage with ‘good families’, or in gardens and livestock, or in legitimate enterprises that create e mploym ent, then har !m activities begin to be justified as a necessary m eans to live a moral life and gain higher social standing.7 There appears to be tacit acceptance, too, that the dire economic situation in M ali m eans al-fr!d al-har !m (illicit smuggling) is the only w ay to get the funds ne eded to live a truly moral lifestyle. So w hile the drugs trade is regarded as sinful, the fruit that it brings is not; drugs money may be illegal, but not everything that is illegal is alw ays se en as wrong. 8 W hatever benefits are gained and w hatever justifications are made, smuggling would still not be possible without the collusion of, or at least the toleration by state and political authorities. And the suspicions go all the w ay to the top. A report by com m entator Cheikh Ba, published by the w ebsite M aliactu, claim ed that form er President A madou Toumani Touré had personally intervened for the release of drug barons. O ne of the alleged drugs traffickers w ho had be en arrested for w hat is now know n as the Air Cocaine incident (discussed later), w as said to have be en fre ed because the president w as relying on him to raise militias to contain the advance of secessionist rebels in the north. The alleged drugs trafficker, how ever, w as reported to have joined the M UJA O Islamists instead, w ho are know n to be directly involved in drug smuggling. 9 MOROCCO MAURITANIA 2. Common public conceptions of right and wrong, especially concerning drug smuggling, have become blurred. 3. State and public authorities have begun participating in the drugs trade. Islamist militant groups and their areas of influence in Africa ALGERIA The power of drug money in Mali Introduction 5 CAMEROON KENYA SOMALIA The Cocainebougous of M ali and the Sahel signify how patterns of developm ent and economic grow th are being shaped by an illicit enterprise. They also represent changing norms about w hat is acceptable or not in terms of making money in an extre m ely resource-poor and chronically unstable region. But perhaps most importantly, such castles in the sand symbolise growing corruption and how forms of governance and state-building are changing. They ne ed to be analysed in terms of the trading and social net works in w hich they are nestled, as w ell as their interconnectedness with the outside world. That, how ever, is a larger research agenda, w hich is beyond the scope of this present case study. The goal here is mainly an introduction – to provide som e evidence that these patterns are inde ed happening and worth investigating. It is an atte mpt to open the doors for developm ent agencies to get involved in the discussions. The research for this case study started in early 2013 – one year after the outbreak of the conflict in M ali. It centred on the question: ‘ W hat are the causal links bet w e en the cocaine trade and instability in M ali?’ It atte mpted to throw light on how terrorist insurgents, drug traffickers, and elected and appointed officials are linked to and affect each other. In answ ering these questions, this case study looks at how drugs money ends up being spent locally, and the significance of this spending. The trafficking in narcotics is conventionally treated as a criminal proble m, for w hich the sole solution is often tough law enforce m ent. This case study argues that the ‘drug proble m’ in places like M ali is rooted in economic and political realities, and therefore requires economic and political – or developm ental – solutions. Simply atte mpting, for example, to disrupt the illicit drugs market, without any understanding of the underlying social and political relationships that enable it to thrive, may w ell be too blunt an instrum ent, that leads to unintended and counter-productive consequences. So in this case study: Part 1 will describe the W est African drugs context and M ali’s role in it: w ho does the smuggling and w hat and how they smuggle? Part 2 will explore how narcotics smuggling is linked with instability in M ali, and in particular how it is connected with groups including jihadist organisations such as A QIM , M UJA O and Ansar Eddine; as w ell as with the governm ent. Part 3 looks at the broader issues of governance, particularly misappropriation of aid, to strengthen the argum ent that reforms are ne eded to tackle the proble m of drugs and address, by extension, the challenges of insecurity. Part 4, by w ay of conclusion, is designed m erely to provide a starting point for participative stakeholder workshops on the issue. The power of drug money in Mali Part 1: Smuggling in West Africa and Mali 6 The power of drug money in Mali Part 1: Smuggling in West Africa and Mali 7 Part 1: Smuggling in West Africa and Mali For centuries, nomadic and se mi-nomadic people have used the trade routes that crisscross the Sahel-Sahara belt. These declined at the end of the 19th century, but w ere reinvigorated after decolonisation in 1960 and the establishm ent of present-day national borders. Tradesm en w ho traversed the desert to smuggle consum er goods, such as foodstuffs and fuel from Libya and Algeria to W est Africa, made the ancient trading routes fully operational again by the 1960s and 1970s. Transnational net works becam e more significant: smuggling counterfeit and black-market cigarettes in the 1980s; small arms in the 1990s; and drugs from around the year 2000.10 The black market across North Africa is currently experiencing som ething of a boom. As reported in the Economist, everything from fuel, eggs and powdered milk, to Viagra and counterfeit prescription drugs, to cocaine, hashish, cigarettes and arms stocks from Libya are smuggled and sold.11 Illicit drugs – notably cocaine, but also cannabis resin for the North African market – are the most profitable of the high-value com modities being trafficked. Halal and haram smuggling To put drugs trafficking in M ali’s desert areas into context, it is necessary to first clarify the difference bet w e en hal !l (allow ed) and har !m (forbidden or socially unacceptable) forms of smuggling – distinctions that are normally invisible to outsiders. Both licit and illicit goods are smuggled by net works of people w ho traditionally exchanged and traded to make a living. This trade is se en as noble: not only as a w ay to survive in a harsh environm ent, but also an affirmation of independence and autonomy. The family and kinship net works involved in this smuggling date from precolonial tim es are often extended and ce m ented by marriage.12 They facilitate the transit of goods across borders by providing labour, transport, accom modation, food, w ater, credit and information. These social net works provide security and reciprocity in a space that is usually ungoverned by formal politics or official controls. This is hal! l smuggling. Smuggling is usually hal !l w hen it involves big lorries, often moving in convoys, w hich act as travelling markets, delivering and selling goods from tow n to tow n. The lorries also double up as buses, postal or m edical couriers, or re mittance agents, thereby providing further services to com munities. The drivers and their assistants rely on the hospitality of tow ns and villages along the w ay. Hal !l smuggling relies on the net works of kinship for their labour ne eds. arms, drugs and human trafficking, estimated to generate $3.8 billion annually’.16 In contrast, how ever, much of the drugs smuggling in W est Africa is organised by large-scale and more centralised organisations, often with corporation-style structures. This form of smuggling is al-fr!d al har!m. It involves 4x4s travelling at spe ed through the region, barely stopping at tow ns or com munities they pass en route to their destination, and refuelling with diesel at hidden pre-stocked points in the desert. It is typically conducted by mafias that recruit smugglers on an ad hoc, individual basis, without considering family or tribe origins, and bypassing elders or traditional gateke epers in the local com munities. W ithin W est Africa, there have be en thre e identifiable hubs for drugs trafficking that have e m erged: northern (GuineaBissau, Guinea, the Gambia and Senegal), southern (Nigeria, B enin, Togo and Ghana), and eastern (M ali and parts of M auritania, w here shipm ents arrive by air). O nce the bulk deliveries arrive, they are transported onw ards to Europe via a number of m ethods and routes: overland across the Sahara, by sea and by air.17 According to the U N O D C, the m ethods for moving cocaine consignm ents onw ards are num erous, often low-key, and evolve and adapt constantly in response to drug law-enforce m ent efforts. The amounts involved are relatively small, usually no more than 100200kg.18 These factors combine to make smuggling difficult for the authorities to detect. H erein lies the moral distinction. In simplistic terms, smuggling can be har!m or hal !l, depending on the w ay it is carried out – the degre e to w hich it is connected to the com munities through w hich it passes is more important in judging its morality than the goods smuggled the mselves. So there is ‘smuggling’ that is a traditional m eans of surviving and making a living in the desert. And there is ‘smuggling’ that is considered sinful and socially unacceptable. How these are understood, used or respected by illicit actors could spell the difference bet w e en w ho succe eds or fails, w ho is exposed to greater risks than others, or how a smuggler becom es better connected than competitors. Drugs smuggling in West Africa Since around 2003, W est Africa has be en steadily transforming into a major hub for smuggling Latin A m erican cocaine into Europe.13 It has also becom e a centre for logistics, com mand and control for Latin A m erican drug cartels.14 According to the UK’s National Crim e Agency (formally the Serious Organised Crim e Agency), the region received and redistributed som e of the 25-30 m etric tons of cocaine imported into the UK each year, with an estimated value for w holesale dealers of over £200m.15 D espite the dispersal of jihadist, secessionist, and criminal groups following the French intervention in 2013, both U N and French forces, reports the International Crisis Group (IC G), struggled to consolidate security gains. Continuing insecurity has prevented the restoration of state authority, or the delivery of humanitarian aid. A June 2015 IC G report states that the C entral Sahel is turning into a ‘perfect storm’ of actual and potential instability, characterised by ‘growing numbers of jihadi extre mists and illicit activities, including In a 2011 report, the International Institute for Strategic Studies identified the m ethods of transport: lorry, bus, car, motorcycle and even bike. Galician fisherm en frequently transport consignm ents from North Africa into Europe. Drugs are often concealed in human mules, and have be en found in African crafts, cosm etics and even pineapples.19 Shipm ents also enter Europe in small propeller-driven aircraft via airports in the Sahel. There is even evidence of drug smugglers using Boeing 727s, w hich show s their sophistication and boldness. In w hat the m edia called the ‘Air Cocaine’ incident, for example, the charred fuselage of a Boeing 727 from Venezuela w as found near Tarkint, northern M ali. Experts believe that the plane w as delivering a cargo of up to 10 tons of cocaine. But after unloading, the plane failed to take off w hen one of its w he els got stuck in the sand and it w as set alight to destroy the evidence. The cargo, with an estimated stre et value of more than $300m, w as never recovered by Interpol or the national authorities w ho investigated the incident. According to the U N O D C report, 18 tons of pure cocaine w as transported across W est Africa in 2010 – a fall from a peak of 47 tons in 2007. 20 As the overall cocaine supply to Europe has re mained about the sam e, this drop could reflect a number of things: • the inherent nimbleness of traffickers • the creation of ne w routes to avoid detection 21 • a return to more traditional routes by Latin A m erican grow ers • and/or a severing of relations bet w e en Latin A m erican grow ers and corrupt officials in W est Africa after large-scale seizures of drugs subsequently disappeared. 22 Drugs smuggling in Mali B efore and during the colonial period, M ali and surrounding Saharan territories w ere subject to ende mic violence. As M alian professor Dalla Konaté explained in a lecture in 2009: ‘In periods of absence of strong central pow ers, social violence w as composed essentially of raids (razzias) that Tuareg tribes conducted on civilian populations and against trading caravans.’ 23 Konaté said that the short First Régim e in M ali (1960-68) could not pacify the north because of resistance by traditional leaders. As a result, the area returned to a culture of violence and sporadic banditry, providing foreign traffickers and Islamic extre mists with fertile ground to establish bases. M ali becam e increasingly prominent as a transit point for drugs on their w ay from W est Africa to Europe in the mid-2000s, w hen couriers began to use regular com m ercial flights. In O ctober 2007, 22 human mules w ere arrested on arrival in A msterdam on a flight from M ali’s capital Bamako. M alian customs officers also seized 116kg and 35kg of pure cocaine (about £2.32m and £0.7m at w holesale stre et value, respectively) at Koure male, near the Guinea border, in t wo separate incidents in 2007. 24 B et w e en 2006 and 2008, 254kg of cocaine w ere seized in Europe from flights coming from M ali. 25 Since 2009 there has be en a marked reduction in the use of cocaine couriers on flights from W est Africa. 26 There is enough reason to suggest that M ali, until the events of 2012, re mained a key stopping-off point on the route to Europe. Prior to the 2012 uprising, the most serious incidents of note included the Air Cocaine crash in 2009; the 2010 conviction of a police com missioner for collaborating in the construction of a concealed landing strip in the desert; and the January 2010 landing near the M auritanian border of a B e echcraft B E300 from Venezuela, w here its consignm ent w as loaded onto 4x4s before disappearing off the authorities’ radar. 27 In any case, the 2012 conflict would have only served to reconfigure the drug trafficking routes. Drug trafficking in the desert is know n to be highly flexible and extre m ely adaptable. B ecause the area is huge and sparsely populated, with porous borders, and w here governm ent reach is extre m ely limited, routes can be quickly redirected to avoid trouble spots or concentrations of governm ent or U N forces. Drug traffickers are know n to maintain hidden fuel and supplies depots in the desert that are located using hand- The power of drug money in Mali Part 1: Smuggling in West Africa and Mali 8 held satellite navigation devices, making redirection of routes by a fe w hundred miles only a matter of inconvenience. Today drug use in cities such as Bamako and Kidal is increasing, w hich indicates that drugs are still being transported through M ali. 28 In D ece mber 2013, a Bolivian travelling via Brazil, Togo and Burkina Faso w as caught with 5kg of cocaine hidden in his suitcase lining w hile in Bamako. 29 A fe w days earlier, a smaller consignm ent of cocaine and amphetamines w as seized at Bamako airport in a package that follow ed the sam e route. Journalists have be en told there are fe w such arrests because officials do not receive financial incentives. There is also only one official laboratory authorised to identify narcotics for the w hole country. !"#$%&'()*+,-.$&/0%"1 W hen conflict erupted in 2012 it disrupted the northern trafficking routes. Analysis is only just starting to e m erge on how they have reconfigured. Trafficking routes are flexible and adapt to law-enforce m ent efforts and the changing political environm ent. A number of unprecedented drugs seizures in previously unused routes and transit points indicated old routes w ere being avoided and ne w routes opened up. In A pril 2013, a huge seizure w as made in M auritania, indicating that perhaps because of the uncertainty caused by the conflicts in M ali, traffickers w ere moving operations to the neighbouring country. 30 In 2012, Algeria seized 73 tons of cannabis (almost t wice as much as in 2008) and then 50 tons in the first half of 2013. 31 The Niger tow ns of Agadez and Arlit on the N25 road north tow ards Algeria, as w ell as the northern Passe de Salvador near the border with Libya and Algeria, are also apparently becoming more important as drug-trafficking routes. 32 According to French criminologist Xavier Raufer: ‘Since the first rumours of battle in M ali, drug logisticians have be en thinking about ne w routes, and have modified their journeys through the north of the country. N e w routes are already opening up in Angola, DRC [the D e mocratic Republic of Congo], the Great Lakes and Libya. The profits linked to cocaine trafficking are so big that longer routes and higher transport prices are not a proble m.’ 33 2"3$45'3"&1$'-6$7"-")*,'&,"1$,-$%8"$ drug trade There are many beneficiaries in the W est African drugsmuggling ‘food chain’. Mafia drug barons are at the top, and located in the capital cities of W est Africa, Brazil and Colombia. They work with local drug bosses, w ho manage the business on the ground. In M ali, many of the these bosses are w ell-know n local businessm en from Kidal, w here smuggling is dominated by mountain-based Ifoghas Tuareg; Gao, w here smuggling is dominated by Tile msi Arabs; and Timbuktu, w here smuggling is dominated by B erabiche Arabs. 34 These groups dominate different ele m ents of the trade, but have competed regularly and violently with each other over ‘turf’. Young people can be easily attracted by the promise of quick money and adventure. They are involved in the drugs trade, both as key players in the transport of narcotics across Africa to Europe, and as end users. Young m en are e mployed as drivers, moving drugs consignm ents in 4x4s across the desert to specific locations. The work is dangerous, and many end up killed or maim ed in accidents or confrontations with border officials or bandits. M any of these young people ultimately w ant to give up driving drugs consignm ents through the desert. Just like their bosses, they w ant to invest their profits into a life that is al-hal !l, either using their fle et of vehicles to set up a smuggling interest in licit goods, or start a legitimate business aw ay from the smuggling scene altogether. The drugs trade and the high profits it can generate make it difficult for developm ent program m es in northern M ali to promote traditional types of e mploym ent for young people. M oham ed, a young Tuareg from Timbuktu used to smuggle subsidised fuel from Algeria, before he switched to cocaine. H e claims that drug consignm ents w ere dropped in the desert, and he would be paid $3,000 to ferry the m to a given location. After several successful trips, he w as given the vehicle. ‘ W ith this money I w as able to organise thre e w edding cere monies – how could I have done this with the other job?’ 35 A similar story w as reported by Ashua Hirsh in M ay 2013 in the Guardian. ‘ W hen w e transported cigarettes, I would be paid around 100,000 C FA francs [about $200] for each trip. W ith cocaine, I earned 1 million [$2,000],’ M oham ed explained. ‘ W e would drive through the desert in convoys, and each car would earn roughly 18m C FA [$36,000] – the driver, security man and I would all be paid a fe e, and my boss would ke ep the rest.’ 36 Regional criminal-terrorist organisations are heavily enm eshed in the drugs trade. They include M UJA O, w hich has now m erged with the Signed in Blood Battalion to form Al- M urabitun; A QIM; and Ansar Eddine. Reports reveal that w hile m e mbers of M UJA O are involved directly in The power of drug money in Mali Part 1: Smuggling in West Africa and Mali 9 smuggling, A QIM plays a different role, primarily charging ‘transit taxes’ or providing protection. Elected and civil officials are also de eply involved in drug trafficking. In M ali, one of the more pernicious repercussions of having political elites with a vested interest in the drugs trade is the creation of a complex w eb of alliances bet w e en governm ent, criminal and terrorist groups. These alliances contributed to the rapid takeover of northern M ali by a de facto coalition of criminal, terrorist and secessionist rebels in early 2012. The rebels, with a mostly Tuareg leadership, belonged mainly to the M NL A . They proce eded to declare the short-lived Republic of A zaw ad. 37 Communities through w hich drugs money passes or from w hich m e mbers of criminal net works hail are also stakeholders in the drugs trade. Not only do they receive windfall injections of cash, they also receive forms of protection that increase their security and social standing. 38 Som e com munities give the drugs trade their tacit approval, but those that do not – particularly those based along regional frontiers – have increasingly little choice in the matter. Such com munities have becom e more dependent on drugs revenue as legitimate businesses and investm ent stay aw ay. 39 The money: Who spends it and what on? W hat primarily draw s all of these groups to the drugs trade is significant profits. In 2010 it is estimated that 18 tons of cocaine w as trafficked through W est Africa. Typically, 1kg of cocaine at w holesale purity of around 65% costs about $53,000, w hich m eans that 18 tons is worth $1.25bn at stre et or retail value. 40 This is not net profit, and no one know s the actual amount that ends up in the pockets of W est African criminals or the w ar chests of terrorist insurgents. That said, the U N O D C calculated that in 2012, around $500m from the cocaine trade w as either laundered or spent in W est Africa. 40 This gives at least an idea of the sort of figures (and, critically, the purchasing pow er) that law enforcers are dealing with. But the key question is not about gross sums, but rather w hat can be done with the money that is acquired. Crucially, could the cocaine money thought to be spent in the region be enough to potentially cause destabilisation? A comparison bet w e en the illicit drug revenues estimated by the U N O D C on one hand, and military expenditure in the region on the other, might provide a clue. According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, the $500m of cocaine money laundered or spent in W est Africa in 2012 was more than the total military expenditure of many of the W est African states through w hich drugs transit (se e table below). In addition, it is more than the $455.5m promised by donors for the African-led International Support Mission in M ali (A FIS M A). 42 Inferences could therefore be draw n that because drug money is at such a degre e comparable to the size of military spending, it must be fuelling instability in the region. The involvement of the insurgent groups and terrorist net works in northern M ali in drugs trafficking already demonstrates that drug money is already making that impact. It will be easy for drugs traffickers aw ash with cash to build up their arsenals. In the Middle East and Africa a Kalashnikov sells for an average price of $267, but can be available for as little as $12 ( World Bank supplied average figures). 4 3 Conflicts in W est Africa and the Sahel-Sahara region have led to a type of arms trafficking akin to recycling. 4 4 M ost recently, large amounts of small arms w ere reportedly brought into M ali from Libya. In an unexpected consequence of the Arab Spring, A QIM and the Tuaregs gained access to Country Total military expenditure (2012) Share of GDP M ali $149m 1.6% Burkina Faso $146m 1.5% M auritania $120m (2009) 3.8% (2009) Niger $69.8m 1.0% Guinea Bissau $16.6m 2.0% Côte d’Ivoire $407m (estimated) 1.8% Source: Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, M ilitary expenditure database, 1998-2012 45 The power of drug money in Mali Part 1: Smuggling in West Africa and Mali 10 The power of drug money in Mali Part 2: Criminals, terrorists and the corrosion of democracy 11 Part 2: Criminals, terrorists and the corrosion of democracy form er Libyan leader Colonel M uam mar Gaddafi’s arsenals. 46 Failure to secure these w eapons w as an oversight by the W est, w hich, in the words of the presidents of Chad and Niger, Idriss D éby and M ahamadou Issoufou, did not offer the ‘after sales service’ ne eded to contain the impact on W est Africa. 47 Research in 2007 indicates that there w ere at least 81,000 Kalashnikovs circulating in the Sahel region. 48 The number today is likely to be far higher. In M ali, significant arsenals comprising w eapons of all calibres, am munition, explosive devices and detonating syste ms w ere found by O peration Serval forces. 49 These arms caches w ere not just uncovered in A QIM ’s mountainous stronghold in the north, but w ere also in urban areas, including a ce m etery in Timbuktu. 50 It is no surprise that after the collapse of Gaddafi’s regim e, there w ere reports of A QIM buying up the vast stockpiles of w eaponry. 51 Though it is impossible to say how much the w eaponry cost, basic economics will say that a supply glut will force dow n prices, leading to a greater quantity being purchased. The easy availability of small arms is a key reason that turns criminal enterprise into a governance and security threat. The impact of the illicit drugs trade is obviously not just from how its profits can fuel instability. Another significant consequence is the rising levels of drug use in the region. Drug abuse among young people in W est Africa is on the rise, and with it the associated proble ms of addiction. In 2008, a Situation Analysis of M alian Youth and HIV/AIDS (unpublished because it is still under governm ent e mbargo) worked with groups of young researchers in four regions of M ali. They reported specific locations w here drugs w ere available – for example, at the regional hospital in Gao. The study w as presented to stakeholders, including police and military officials, for validation. Its details w ere not challenged, but because it implicated security and governm ent services, it w as put under an indefinite e mbargo. 52 The U N O D C reported in 2012 that there w ere perhaps 2.3 million cocaine users in W est and C entral Africa. It raised concerns that the region’s role – particularly in processing cocaine – ‘may be growing as evidenced by seizures of processing equipm ent for cocaine, ecstasy and m ethamphetamine’. 53 There are no figures on drug use in M ali, but anecdotal evidence suggests that more young people are becoming users, as w ell as getting involved in trafficking, and this can pose a serious public health proble m in the future. 5 4 As form er U N Secretary- G eneral Kofi Annan said: ‘ W est Africa initially w as se en as a transit point, but no country re mains a transit point for long. The population begins to use it.’ 55 D e eper analysis on the impact of the drugs trade on young people is required, but is outside the scope of this report. Conclusion Any effort to tackle smuggling in illicit goods has to take into account that smuggling (al-fr!d) has be en part of the economic landscape of the Sahel-Sahara belt for centuries. It provides com munities with a m eans for survival. D e eper analysis of how different groups gain from the trade and the ‘push’ factors for their engage m ent will also be necessary, as will engage m ent of private firms and businesses that play roles in facilitating the drugs trade, even if they are not directly involved in the illicit enterprise the mselves. The impact on young people ne eds to be examined in greater depth, too, with a vie w to developing better strategies to protect the m. This could include improving their access to public health services or strengthening com munity organisations in areas w here young people are vulnerable both to drug use and being recruited to transport drugs. M ost importantly, significant investm ent is ne eded in the north of the country to provide a viable alternative to involve m ent in drugs trafficking. The ne wly form ed governm ent ne eds to com e up with a credible plan in collaboration with com munity groups based in the north. If investm ent focuses on Bamako and the south, and the marginalisation of the north is not addressed, the security situation will re main precarious. ‘For West African states, one of the most serious challenges to state !"#$%$&'(%!()*+(%,-".(/0(,/)%1!(&,2()*+%#(%34&1)(/,(4"5'%16(4#%$&)+( sector, and community institutions. The emerging culture of quick and easy acquisition of money threatens democracy – drug cartels have 5/"7*)(0#%+,2!(%,(*%7*(4'&1+!(%,(8+!)(90#%1&:(;*+(!1&'+(/0()*+(4#/5'+3( %!(!/(3&!!%$+()*&)()*+(<,%)+2(=&)%/,!(>0?1+(0/#(@#"7!(&,2(A#%3+( B<=>@AC(!)&)+!D(E;*%!(%!(3/#+()*&,(&(2#"7!(4#/5'+3:(F)(%!(&(!+#%/"!( security threat”.’56 Kwesi Aning, 2009 A growing number of experts fear that huge parts of W est Africa could becom e a serious security threat – ie, a haven for terrorists, criminals and rebels – as a result of the re markable expansion of the narcotics trade. M ali itself is the best illustration. B efore the events of 2012, M ali enjoyed a reputation for relative stability and good governance. It preceded the Arab Spring countries by more than 20 years, w hen, in 1991, its popular protests saw the overthrow of a dictator. Relatively de mocratic elections with a smooth handover of pow er follow ed soon after. From 1995 to 2005, the country posted an impressive economic grow th rate of 5.8%, far outpacing most other African countries. Yet within the span of a fe w short w e eks in 2012, state control crumbled in the north; restive soldiers staged a coup in the capital; the central governm ent collapsed; and an odd assortm ent of separatist rebels, terrorist groups and criminals engine ered a breakaw ay republic in the north. 57 Christian Aid’s country director for M ali, Yacouba Kone, asked how state control could break dow n so quickly, w hen decentralisation should have already be en working in the northern regions. ‘How can apparently stable institutions – particularly a de mocratically elected governm ent respected throughout Africa and beyond, and w hich w as in any case due to step dow n in A pril 2012 – collapse and com e to ruin so quickly?’ Even more importantly, Kone asks: ‘ W hy did the majority of M alians not bother to take a stand and defend their de mocratic institutions?’ 58 Why did Mali’s government crumble 1/$90,*+53: H ere is one quick answ er to Kone’s questions: the illicit drugs trade, without many people noticing, had seriously corroded M ali’s institutions and sapped the civic spirit. Kw esi Aning, a security researcher at the Kofi Annan International Peaceke eping Training C entre, believes drug cartels have bought friends in high places, and this is particularly evident in M ali. In w hat could be a straightfor w ard case of gre ed or w eakness in the face of vast sums of easy money, officials within governm ent and the security sector have sought personal gain and political alliances from active involve m ent in the drugs trade. As Chatham House fellow Paul M elly observed in the article ‘The sad decline of M ali’: ‘Drugs money, corruption and jihadists have pushed one of Africa’s most admired de mocracies into crisis’. 59 H ere are a fe w examples that illustrate how and w hy governance institutions had becom e so brittle and thus crumbled so quickly in northern M ali: • A 31 August 2007 confidential cable, apparently written by US A mbassador Terrence M cCulley and published by W ikileaks, 60 identified the late Com mandant (M ajor) O uld Bou Lamana as having brokered the return of a seized cocaine shipm ent to a Tuareg drug smuggler, in exchange for $450,000. This w as also an ‘advance tax for future trips’. Lamana w as an ethnic B erabiche Arab and ranking intelligence officer in the M alian Director- G eneral for State Security (D GSE). H e w as also a form er m e mber of the Front Islamique Arabe de l’A zaw ad, an Arab rebel move m ent in northern M ali. The cable said: ‘Lamana has fed information to criminal and terrorist organisations in The power of drug money in Mali Part 2: Criminals, terrorists and the corrosion of democracy 12 the past, and his exact role within state security re mains a mystery.’ It also claim ed that a m e mber of President Touré’s staff w as overheard complaining about Lamana’s involve m ent in a phone call to D GSE Director- G eneral Colonel M amy Coulibaly. • A senior local governm ent official in north M ali, w ho President Toure once called Mon Bandite, and is suspected of having close ties with terrorists, w as accused of being involved in the 2009 Air Cocaine incident. In 2008, he negotiated the release of Canadian U N diplomats kidnapped by the ‘one-eyed bandit’ M okhtar B elmokhtar. 61 O n 24 M arch 2011, Reuters reported that four people had be en arrested in connection with the Air Cocaine investigation. 62 How ever, the governm ent later released the m without charge 63 and reportedly on the orders of the president himself. • Prior to the 2012 insurgency, there w ere reports of other cocaine flights. Algeria Watch, a human rights agency, reported that on 6 F ebruary 2010 a plane carrying four tons of cocaine landed in the tow n of Kayes in w estern M ali. The report stated that the plane w as w elcom ed by a group of local notables. Soldiers from the Nampula barracks in the Segou region w ere also reportedly involved, marking the ground to help the plane land. 6 4 The sam e report m entions that thre e days later, the sam e notables received another plane that landed in Ain In Esseri, southeast of Tinzaouatin near the Niger border. • In Septe mber 2011, a judge at the O uargla M agistrates’ Court in Algeria asked the National Asse mbly of M ali to lift the parliam entary im munity for a M e mber of Parliam ent from northern M ali, so he could be investigated on suspicion of being part of a drugs trafficking net work involved in the acquisition and sale of 500kg of cannabis in Algeria, M ali and Niger. 63 • A 20 M arch 2013 report authored by Cheikh Ba and published by M aliactu claim ed that form er President A madou Toumani Touré had intervened himself for the release of alleged drug barons. O ne, arrested for the Air Cocaine incident, w as said to have be en fre ed because the president w as relying on him to raise militias to contain the advance of M NL A rebels in the north. How ever he w as reported to have joined M UJA O Islamists instead, w ho are know n to be directly involved in drug smuggling. 66 • After French intervention in early 2013 w hich largely ended the conflict, a ne w M ali governm ent issued a list of six alleged ‘narco-traffickers’ – all of the m figures of note in northern M ali. How ever, at the tim e of writing this report, no action appeared to have be en taken against any of the m. In M ali, it is widely believed that they have be en effectively cleared in the interests of the peace process. 67 • In a F ebruary 2013 intervie w with Times correspondent Jerom e Starkey, Gao mayor Sadou Diallo admitted hosting t wo of the m en on the governm ent’s narco-trafficker list, just t wo w e eks after the French routed rebels from the north of the country. They reportedly left Gao t wo days before w arrants for their arrests w ere issued. Diallo claim ed he is ‘just a little African mayor and a selfmade man. I don’t even know the colour of cocaine.’ H e revealed himself to be the ow ner of 30 houses, nine hotels and thre e night clubs, saying that he made most of his incom e by leasing rooms to A m erican special forces w ho w ere training the M alian army before the 2012 coup. H e also said he had purchased his four pick-up trucks, a Hum m er, thre e Land Cruisers and t wo Je eps from drug mules w ho w ere given these vehicles by drugs traffickers as paym ent. Diallo added: ‘I can tell you that the world is built with the money of trafficking. W e are fighting against terrorism, but even the most pow erful army cannot fight against drugs.’ 68 • A M arch 2013 report by the Institute of Security Studies cited how the M alian leadership had long exploited ethnic tensions to try to ke ep the north under control. It gave ethnic militia access to certain illegal markets as a re w ard for their support. Thus, the report said, ‘increasingly the political syste m in M ali becam e reliant on criminal proce eds.’ How ever, the exponential grow th in profits m eant increased violent competition over the lucrative smuggling routes. Arm ed groups and militias form ed along clan lines and ‘becam e better arm ed, more violent and more professional’. Drug bosses w ere soon lobbying the governm ent for administrative control over specific ethnic groupings, such as the Lamhar in the Gao region, and the B erabiche in Timbuktu. ‘Clashes related to cocaine smuggling played out throughout 2007-2008, som etim es with the direct intervention of state officials.’ 69 The power of drug money in Mali Part 2: Criminals, terrorists and the corrosion of democracy 13 Government toleration of drug smuggling According to historian Stephen Ellis of the African Studies C entre, W est Africa has a political and social environm ent suitable for the drug trade because ‘smuggling is widely tolerated, law enforce m ent is fitful and inefficient, and politicians are easily bribed or even involved in the drug trade the mselves. A pliable sovereign state is the ideal cover for the drug trafficker.’ 70 Som e international law experts, like the UK-based International Institute of Security Studies, fear the region will becom e ‘another M exico’ if the proble m of organised crim e is not dealt with effectively. W hile gang culture in M exico is based more on life-long com mitm ents in a context of social and family ties, and alliances bet w e en smuggling groups in W est Africa tend to be te mporary and opportunistic, there are som e similarities.71 For example, both have territories w here the central governm ent has little or no control; both have governm ent officials involved in the drugs trade and vulnerable to corruption; both have judicial syste ms that have be en corrupted. M any political com m entators have suggested that the north of M ali is the country’s main corridor for the transit of drugs. Since the outbreak of the conflict in 2012 and the subsequent French military intervention, how ever, evidence has e m erged that the narcotics trade is being rerouted through the Kayes region, w hich is close to M auritania and has be en firmly under governm ent control. This suggests the trade is being moved to w here governm ent or military officials could more easily protect it. The renaming of som e districts in Bamako after know n drug traffickers is another indication that narcotics smuggling is not a preserve of the north. Drug use in Bamako is also on the increase.72 It is hard to imagine drug smuggling happening without governm ent acquiescence. As the U N O D C report says, ‘Smuggling is often accomplished not by stealth, but by corruption. The profits gained in som e trafficking flow s are sufficient to buy cooperation from high levels of governm ent […] thus undermining governance.’ 73 Religion-inspired militants, criminals, or both? But it is not just public officials and institutions that are involved in the illicit drugs trade. Even Islamic extre mists – w ho follow and impose their strict interpretation of religious doctrines and consider narcotics as evil – appear more pragmatic w hen it com es to the profits to be made from the drugs trade. Several press and special reports illustrate this point: • The Sunday Mirror in the UK reported that A QIM earned £168m from cocaine trafficking and flooding Britain with drugs.74 • The Nor w egian Peacebuilding Resource C entre reported that during the 2012 rebel occupation of Tessalit in the Kidal region, at least thre e small aircraft landed, allegedly carrying cocaine. Jihadist occupiers supervised the operation.75 • A M alian ne w spaper and w ebsite reported that in midA pril 2012, a cargo plane carrying arms and drugs landed in Gao, in an incident similar to Air Cocaine. The cargo w as unloaded onto more than a dozen pick-up trucks, and collected by the m en of Iyad ag Ghaly, a form er M alian diplomat in Saudi Arabia, and the e mir of the jihadist group Ansar Eddine.76 • A docum ent reportedly circulating among diplomats in early 2013 claim ed drugs smuggler A mhada Ag M ama, alias A bdou Karim Targui, had joined forces with Ansar Eddine.77 In M ay 2015 it w as reported that Ag M ama had be en killed by French special forces. H e w as suspected of the kidnapping and murder of t wo French journalists in 2013, and also said to be involved in the death of an aid worker and the abduction of four French nationals in Niger, both in 2010. • In 2009, there w as widespread coverage in the US press about ‘narcoterrorism’ and M ali. It follow ed a sting operation by US drugs enforce m ent agents posing as Colombian guerrillas, w hich led to charges being filed against thre e W est Africans arrested in Ghana. During the operation, M alians boasted about how they could arrange protection from A QIM for a drugs consignm ent to cross the Sahara.78 • According to Colonel Didier Dacko, a military com mander in northern M ali: ‘They [the jihadists] get som e money from kidnapping W esterners, but nothing like w hat they get from the drugs… it’s their lifeblood.’ 79 It is important to note that the reports above could not be independently verified. Also, the opinion of a M alian army com mander must be read in the context of the battle to regain the north. As Wolfram Lacher 80 and Andre w Lebovich 81 have argued, there is a marked absence of The power of drug money in Mali Part 2: Criminals, terrorists and the corrosion of democracy 14 terrorist groups from the reported clashes bet w e en drug smugglers in the region, w hich indicates their involve m ent is not as great as these reports suggest. The involve m ent of terrorist groups in narcotics smuggling takes different forms. Som etim es, individuals within these terrorist net works, rather than the net works the mselves, are involved. Their involve m ent is often indirect: in the sam e w ay that the governm ent in Bamako used access to lucrative illicit markets to re w ard local militias for their cooperation, terrorist net works tolerate the ‘incom e-generating’ activities of the local com manders they rely on. The best example of an individual inside terrorist net works acting on his ow n is M okhtar B elmokhtar, a smuggler in the region w ho allied himself with jihadist causes. B elmokhtar linked up with A QIM and continued making money w hile fighting for the m. But he soon had prolonged disagre e m ents with their leadership, de monstrated by a ‘scathing’ letter to B elmokhtar from A QIM ’s Shura Council, found in Timbuktu by the Associated Press after militants w ere ousted from the tow n. 82 B elmokhtar broke ties with A QIM and form ed the Signed in Blood Battalion in D ece mber 2012, w hich later linked with M UJA O to form the Al- M urabitun (The Sentinels) in August 2013. In January 2013, B elmokhtar is believed to have led the attack on the A m enas gas plant in southern Algeria, w here hundreds of local and foreign hostages w ere held for several days. W hen the plant w as retaken, 38 of the hostages w ere killed, including six Britons. In June 2015 there w ere reports B elmokhtar had be en killed by a US air strike in Libya, but this w as later denied by A QIM . A top Islamic militant said to have links with drug traffickers w as A bou Zeid. H e had a reputation as A QIM ’s most violent com mander before he w as killed in F ebruary 2013. 8 3 Originally from Algeria, A bou Zeid w as know n for his links with a group of drug traffickers of B erabiche origin from the Timbuktu area w ho are called ‘the Colombians’. A QIM ’s involve m ent in narcotics trafficking also includes soliciting transit fe es from traffickers and offering arm ed escorts to drug convoys as they crisscross the north. 8 4 According to som e sources, A QIM charges bet w e en 10-15% of the value of cocaine (or up to $4,200 per kg of cocaine). 85 In 2011, hashish traffickers arrested in M auritania claim ed to have paid a $50,000 levy to pass through A QIM controlled territory. 86 As U N O D C expert Alexandre Schmidt said in 2011: ‘The terrorists are facilitating the passage of the traffickers… and they receive a paym ent, either in cash or kind. But w e don’t have any proof that the terrorist groups are organising the drug trafficking the mselves.’ 87 Som etim es the Islamists’ involve m ent is direct and open. This is true of M UJA O, an A QIM splinter group set up in mid-2011. It aim ed to spread jihad to W est Africa, and m erged with the Signed in Blood Battalion in 2013. According to analyst Lacher, a M UJA O founder, Sultan O uld Badi, and t wo other Tile msi Arab businessm en from Gao linked with drug smuggling are consistently nam ed by local sources as financiers of M UJA O. 88 Another w ealthy businessman w ho w as on the governm ent list of ‘narcotraffickers’, reportedly joined M UJA O in 2012 on his release from prison. Bilal Hicham, one of M UJA O’s key black com manders, w ho led a katiba (combat unit) in Gao, quit in Nove mber 2012 and returned to his native Niger, complaining to visiting reporters that: ‘These madm en from M UJA O are not children of God, they are drug traffickers. They do everything w hich goes against Islam, and to their minds, blacks are inferior to Arabs or w hites. M y brigade and I stopped a cargo of drugs but the leaders of M UJA O said w e must let it go.’ 89 It is unclear how de ep the ideological motivations run in M UJA O, or at least in factions within it. They have be en labelled just a front for drug smugglers and money-making ventures, such as w hen they earned an alleged $18m for the release of thre e aid workers they kidnapped in Algeria in O ctober 2011. 9 0 They have also com mitted various atrocities in imple m enting Shari’ah law in Gao. 91 It is impossible to say with certainty the extent to w hich A QIM or M UJA O are involved in drug trafficking – are they religion-inspired militants, criminal entrepreneurs, or both? The rerouting of trafficking routes through Libya may w ell bring A QIM into greater collaborative contact with drugs net works, for example. It is also possible to imagine that A QIM could becom e more involved in the drugs trade if other sources of incom e, notably kidnapping-for-ransom, becom e less viable. How AQIM and MUJAO embed themselves in communities A QIM and M UJA O created bases in Northern M ali, w hich covers almost 70% of the country’s territory but hom e to only 10% of the population, w hich is also the poorest. Northern M alians have historically be en marginalised from the political pow er and economic developm ent enjoyed by the South. Soil fertility is poor, rainfall is low, w ater access is limited and the region is prone to drought. Agricultural G DP per capita is the low est in Africa. 92 The power of drug money in Mali Part 2: Criminals, terrorists and the corrosion of democracy 15 D espite increased investm ent in the 1990s (som e from governm ent, but mostly from private, N G O and religious groups), the north lags behind the south in terms of education, w ater and sanitation syste ms, roads and healthcare. M any livelihoods depended on tourism, 93 w hich has collapsed since the outbreak of conflict. This is w here A QIM steps in. W ith money raised from illicit activities, the group provides som e services normally offered by the state, thus portraying itself to the local com munity as an ally, rather than an invader. A QIM ’s harsh imposition of Shari’ah law in 2012 may have turned many previously supportive com munities against the m, but it has still had som e success at e mbedding itself in the area. As w ell as services, it provided e mploym ent and becam e part of normal economic life, buying goods in the markets and renting properties. 94 As the mayor of a tow n near Timbuktu said: total number of child soldiers is unknow n, but believed to be som e w here bet w e en a fe w hundred and a thousand. For these poor households, w ho may not subscribe to the jihadist cause, complicity with A QIM is a route out of poverty. 97 There have also be en reports of A QIM offering young m en e mploym ent, for about $20 a day, to clear rocks and debris, and build trenches in their camps. 98 It is no surprise that A QIM and its offshoots w ere able to build bases in the north, given how marginalised the region has be en. Though people may be ideologically opposed to the presence of terrorist occupiers, they are caught bet w e en a rock and a hard place. Their ne eds are acute and fe w other incom e-generating options are available. GH+#+(9IFJ(%!(,/)(&(K&1L&'()*&)(%!(&5/")()/( Joining the dots: Government, drugs, 2+$/"#()*+(,/3&2!M(*+#2!:(9IFJ(2/+!(,/)(4/!+( terrorists and instability &()*#+&)()/()*+(4/4"'&)%/,(&,2(%)(*&!(5+1/3+(&( 3&K/#(0/#1+(%,()*+(#+7%/,:(F)!(4+/4'+(*&$+(3+&,!:( The indirect role that drugs played in the instability that ;*+N(7+)(%,$/'$+2(/,(5+*&'0(/0()*+(4/4"'&)%/,(%,( rocked the country in 2012 is perhaps more significant for its longer-term implications for de mocracy and erosion of public 4#/K+1)!(!"1*(&!(5"%'2%,7(O+''!(&,2(4#/$%2%,7( trust in governm ent. health care for nomads in the region. Many ,/3&2!()*%,L()*&)(9IFJ(&,2(0#&"2(&#+('+7&'( The governm ent is implicated in the drugs trade through the activities.’95 links of form er President A madou Toumani Touré to pow erful M UJA O’s story in the very early days of the conflict is similar. After the M NL A com mitted atrocities in Gao, it w as M UJA O that moved in to oust the m, not the M alian army. M UJA O cam e, offering food, money and teams to clean up the tow n. Ibrahima Touré, a m e mber of a Gao youth organisation, said in an intervie w with journalist Serge Daniel: ‘Look at this gutter, since it w as built 15 years ago, this is the first tim e it has be en cleaned, and it w as the M ujahide en w ho took the initiative. W hat is the M alian governm ent doing? Are w e still M alian? In Bamako they are fighting like cat and dog w hile w e suffer here.’ Another young person, Issa Traore, said: ‘O ur soldiers fled Gao. Today it is the governm ent w hich has fled its responsibilities and forgotten us completely. It w as the Islamists w ho fre ed us from the M NL A w hich w as com mitting atrocities here.’ 9 6 An 11 O ctober 2012 press briefing by the U N Assistant Secretary- G eneral on M ali revealed how A QIM built relationships with local households as it recruited child soldiers. M ali’s average annual per capita G DP is $1,100 – and it is much low er in the north. A QIM paid families almost $600 to allow the m to enlist a child, som e as young as nine, follow ed by $400 a month in ‘rent’ or w ages. The Arab and Tuareg businessm en-smugglers in the north. Bamako turned a blind eye to their lucrative illicit activities, in return for the governm ent’s use of the businessm en’s private militias, w hich w ere created to protect smuggling routes and bases. In w hat the International Crisis Group calls ‘re mote-control governance through dubious criminal and mafia interm ediaries’, Touré’s governm ent ‘borrow ed’ Arab and Imghad militias to combat separatist Tuareg insurgencies on behalf of or alongside M alian governm ent troops. 99 Som e of these militias took on a life of their ow n. For example, a Tuareg-Imghad militia based in Kidal w as e mployed by the M alian governm ent to counter a Tuareg rebellion from 2007 to 2009. It w as later integrated into the M alian army, and defended the strategic site of Tessalit in 2012. W hen the tide turned in favour of the rebellion, they feigned defection to M NL A , before withdrawing to Niger to regroup and take part in O peration Serval against M UJA O, Ansar Eddine and A QIM . Another Arab militia, headed by army Colonel A bderamane O uld M eydou, w as form ed by thre e B erabiche Arab businessm en w ho operated out of Timbuktu: They w ere also e mployed by the governm ent to quash the 2007-09 Tuareg The power of drug money in Mali Part 2: Criminals, terrorists and the corrosion of democracy 16 The power of drug money in Mali$;'&%$<=$>'*+5,-.$%8"$./?"&-'-*"$*8'55"-."1 17 Part 3: Tackling the governance challenges rebellion, led by Ibrahim Ag Bahanga. Ag Bahanga w as w anted as much by the governm ent as by the businessm en on w hose drug smuggling turf he w as encroaching.10 0 The businessm en, how ever, could not be totally controlled by the governm ent. They w ere independent and loyal to nothing but their ow n interests. They form ed alliances with terrorist groups, too, over shared interests in the drugs trade and kidnap-for-ransom.101 In return, A QIM and M UJA O w ere able to use these links to operate in an alien political and physical space, w hich they eventually made their hom e. Som e Arab militias also pursued their ow n agendas. M any of the m turned their back on their governm ent e mployers to form the M NL A in Timbuktu, w hich paved the w ay for A QIM ’s occupation.102 And as already discussed, one of the governm ent nam ed ‘narco-traffickers’, a businessman indicted for his role in the Air Cocaine incident, w as released from jail in 2012 at the express com mand of Touré, w ho expected him to mobilise his militias to fight against the M NL A . Instead, he reportedly joined M UJA O.103 No wonder, then, that w hen Touré announced a ‘total and relentless w ar’ against rebels and Islamist groups in the North in 2012, many M alians doubted his sincerity. In 2011, the US gave M ali $138m in military and developm ent aid, with sums earmarked specifically for the w ar against A QIM ,104 having identified M ali as a priority country for military support.105 Up to that point, the governm ent had done nothing, claiming the military w as too ill-equipped and ill-trained to deal resolutely with A QIM . Everyone kne w governm ent rule in the north had depended on indirect collaboration with the terrorists, and direct collaboration with militia groups – groups that becam e better arm ed, more organised and more pow erful, and eventually bit the hand that had fed the m. Touré’s strategy failed. The country is a shambles. Touré has be en ousted and placed under investigation for high treason. (Se e box on page 19.) Conclusion D eliberate as w ell as unintended governm ent complicity in narcotics smuggling underscores the ne ed for a political and economic assessm ent of the drugs crisis in W est Africa. A study of the compromises involved should be the starting point for reflection. Corruption-proofing the ne w governm ent and trying to unpack the factors that led governm ent officials into unholy alliances with illicit groups must be the focus now. This is obviously easier said than done, given the ties that many elected representatives have to their com munities. A QIM and its offshoots have no compunction about making money from criminal enterprise, such as drugs smuggling and kidnapping-for-ransom. This report has show n that there have be en num erous governance failures in M ali, w hich ne ed to be tackled more syste matically. As Yacouba Kone, Christian Aid’s M ali country manager, noted in his analysis, M ali may have be en a de mocracy admired in the region and beyond, but it w as ‘a de mocracy that did not work for the poor’. W hat e m erged instead ‘w as the entrenchm ent of a narrow elite that based its pow er more on patronage and less on popular support, in a bid to control the central governm ent and the economy – both licit and illicit’.10 6 corruption is widespread and ende mic at all levels of M alian society.109 In the 2012 World Economic Forum report, corruption w as listed as the second biggest proble m for M alians doing business in M ali, behind only the issue of access to financing. During the presidential elections in 2013, called to bring an end to a period of upheaval and uncertainty, participation w as unusually high at 48.98%. But this quickly slumped in parliam entary elections only t wo months later to 37%, with an all-tim e low in the capital of barely 30%.110 Form er President Touré’s ‘consensus’ style of leadership has be en particularly criticised. Originally developed as a w ay to be more inclusive, to resolve disputes, and to ensure that different factions have a voice in decision making, Touré’s approach ended up strengthening the gateke epers w ho decide on w ho gets to be called around the table. In effect, Touré ‘strengthened himself and his inner circle, rather than the state that all ethnic groups shared.’107 This approach ‘w as not appropriate for undertaking the structural changes ne eded to address the country’s key challenges’ because it led to the ‘syste matic disabling of the opposition in parliam ent’ – most, if not all, w ere co-opted to join the ‘consensus’. O ver tim e, accountability disappeared and impunity increased. As Kone argues, ‘consensus’ leadership ‘w as not de mocracy at all. Rather, it w as a syste m of patronage to co-opt the leadership of the various parties and muzzle any opposition.’ Public satisfaction with de mocracy is falling (59% in 2000 to 31% in 2012), and fe w er people believing that M ali is a full de mocracy (24% in 2000 to 12% in 2012). But an Afrobarom eter briefing reports that de mocracy is still the preferred form of governm ent in M ali (60% in 2000 to 62% in 2012), as are elections as a syste m to choose leaders (82% in both 2000 and 2012).111 This section focuses on w hat could be done to tackle the governance challenges. Q uite a fe w indicators now show a growing disaffection with the governm ent. Popular alienation from the political process appears to be setting in – and this in a country w here the people could lay claim to being pione ers of the Arab Spring. Research by the political think-tank Friedrich Ebert Stiftung (F ES) in 2013 into low voter turnout indicated that: ‘An over w helming majority of respondents fe el that the country’s political parties pursue only selfish interests, and more than thre e-quarters cannot nam e their parliam entarian (the figure for fe male respondents is 85%.’ W hen asked w hy more M alians don’t vote, ‘the most com mon response is a lack of trust worthy candidates.’ How ever, there w as also a surprising finding: ‘Around 60% of respondents actually trust their interim president and prim e minister.’108 The F ES survey correlates with patterns from other sources. From 2003 to 2011, the World Bank’s indicators on governm ent effectiveness, rule of law and control of corruption in M ali show a dow nw ard trajectory, suggesting A culture of corruption M any of the governance challenges have be en captured in an interesting online debate in English, via anthropologist Bruce W hitehouse’s blog.112 The proble m of corruption, argue som e, is more widespread than has so far be en acknowledged – it is not restricted to the country’s political elite; even ordinary people are involved. As one of the com m ents on the blog said, w hen doctors’ first concern is to treat the better off among the wounded; w hen nurses try to sell m edicines taken from other sick patients; or w hen electricity workers take a bribe to reconnect som eone w ho has never paid his bills, it is clear that the everyday petty corruption of ordinary people can be equally as destructive as high-level political corruption. O ne voice in the debate criticised as dishonest com m ents that attacked only politicians, ‘as if they are the only thieves in the country’. O thers maintained, how ever, that corruption could not be reduced to a simple good guys-bad guys dichotomy. If money could not be made in a law ful w ay, argued som e, then ‘people will find other w ays to support the mselves’. W hat happens w hen opportunities to make a decent, honest living are not plentiful? ‘People every w here make projections about how things will work out and act accordingly.’ An entrepreneur lam ented the absence of informal incentives and formal regulations that would encourage businesses to make profits legally. Therefore, he asks: ‘ W ho is corrupt – ordinary M alians, local and foreign investors, or the state syste m?’ The power of drug money in Mali$;'&%$<=$>'*+5,-.$%8"$./?"&-'-*"$*8'55"-."1 18 W hoever is to blam e for corruption in M ali, it is a serious proble m. A 2010-12 audit, published in D ece mber 2013, reported that C FA 49.49bn (about £59m) w as lost to corruption in M ali, of w hich 15% w as categorised as fraud and 85% attributed to mismanage m ent.113 >8"$).8%$'.',-1%$*/&&04%,/There is, though, an increasing determination to fight back. An independent Auditor- G eneral’s office w as set up in 2004. It is w ell-regarded by the public and feared by those it targets. How ever, there still are no clear procedures on how it could prosecute offenders through the administrative or civil courts.114 In 2012, in another strong state m ent of the governm ent’s desire to tackle corruption, a reform er, M alick Coulibaly, w as appointed as transitional Minister of Justice. There w ere high hopes that he would tackle corruption head on. Coulibaly drafted a robust ne w anti-corruption law that M ali w as due to adopt before the presidential elections in July 2013.115 Unfortunately, the law w as delayed as the Parliam ent sat on it. It will be hard to reinvigorate now, especially since Coulibaly w as not appointed to the ne w governm ent. How ever, Daniel A Tessouge, the official w ho issued the arrest w arrants in 2013 for the arrest of six notables accused by the governm ent of being ‘narco-traffickers’, has be en appointed Attorney- G eneral. But perhaps most significantly, President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita – form er Prim e Minister and President of the National Asse mbly during Touré’s first term in office – declared that 2014 would be the ‘year of the fight against corruption’.116 In this fight, M ali urgently ne eds to deliver results in t wo key areas: decentralisation and aid transparency. Decentralisation The country’s syste m of administrative decentralisation to local authorities w as devised during the administration of the first elected president, Konaré (1992-2002). This w as at the behest of the World Bank and the International M onetary Fund. It did not have the desired effect. Rather than radically improving administrative efficiency, decentralisation instead triggered a redistribution of corruption – from the centre to the local villages. O ne report detailed how local elites competed with each other for contracts aw arded according to a syste m of patronage by those w ho held the purse strings.117 The sale of land – w hether fraudulent or legitimate – and the spe ed of urbanisation created many opportunities for corruption in the aw arding of contracts for buildings, land use and other infrastructure projects.118 Som etim es, the decentralisation process becam e a tool to attract contributions or loans from international donors – by couching projects in terms of ‘decentralisation’ it can be used to pitch for more aid or loans. Aid transparency Aid has be en a cornerstone of M ali’s economy. In 2011, it received around $1bn,119 representing roughly 50% of its public expenditure that year,120 and about 12% of its gross national incom e.121 Aid has provided a significant source of incom e for corrupt officials. In 2010, for example, the Global Fund to Fight Aids, Tuberculosis and M alaria suspended t wo malaria grants (worth $18.1m) and terminated a third grant for tuberculosis (worth $4.5m), after it found evidence of misappropriation and unjustified expenditure of approximately $4m.122 Then in M arch 2011, it suspended a $13.91m HIV/AIDS grant to M ali after further evidence of misuse of funds w as uncovered.123 As has be en widely observed, in a country w here corruption is de e m ed rampant but fe w prosecutions take place, the most unusual ele m ent of this fraud w as not that it happened, but that 14 people have be en charged and actually imprisoned for ‘crim es of undermining the public good, e mbezzling public funds, fraud and using forged docum ents, favouritism and complicity in favouritism.’ The form er Minister of H ealth, Ibrahim O umar Touré (not related to President Touré), w as re manded in custody before a trial that led to his release. But the Global Fund w as not the only pot Touré’s administration w as dipping into. Under the Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper, the governm ent developed national education and health program m es, w hich w ere funded by the World Bank and other donors – funding that depended on making de monstrable progress tow ards set goals.124 To ke ep receiving this aid, the governm ent increased primary school enrolm ent, but did not com m ensurately increase spending on infrastructure, equipm ent or staffing. O nly 12% of high-school students passed leaving exams in 2012, the low est rate ever recorded in the country.125 The primary education completion rate in 2010 w as only 58.1% compared to a sub-Saharan average of about 70%.126 Figures in the agriculture sector w ere fiddled. For example, to ke ep funds flowing, the governm ent artificially inflated The power of drug money in Mali$;'&%$<=$>'*+5,-.$%8"$./?"&-'-*"$*8'55"-."1 19 cereal output numbers, and subsidised fertiliser w as most likely pilfered as it failed to reach many of the village farm ers for w hom it w as intended.127 The net result of aid mismanage m ent w as less funding for badly ne eded public services. During the course of Touré’s rule, genuine investm ent in already w eak public services deteriorated markedly – for example, M ali is not expected to achieve any of its Millennium D evelopm ent Goals by the 2015 deadline.128 Another important ele m ent of this aid mismanage m ent is that it has arguably actually increased M ali’s economic and social north-south divide. M ost program m es that w ere carried out w ere oriented more tow ards the populous urban centres of southern M ali.129 This should provide food for thought for m e mbers of the donor com munity as w ell – have they inadvertently contributed to the north-south divide too? Peace activist Ag Youssouf contends that if aid does not have a corresponding governance capacity, it is ‘going to be a cursed resource… that is going to be part of the proble m rather than the solution’.130 The international com munity has com mitted som e €3.25bn to help rebuild M ali. O f this, €1.35bn will com e from the European Union.131 Building ‘the ne w M ali together’ (as the international donors’ conference w as called) will only happen if the culture of corruption – that is ende mic throughout the governm ent and w as a major cause of the collapse of the state in 2012 – is exposed and eliminated. Institutions and their leaders must prove that they can act with integrity, transparency and accountability. The rise and fall of Touré F e w w ere sorry to se e the back of A madou Tomani Touré in 2012. It w as a sad end to w hat had be en such a promising ascent. Touré had be en a w ell-loved and respected form er army colonel. H e becam e a hero of M ali’s Arab Spring of 1991, w hen he famously disobeyed the orders of a dictatorial president to shoot protesting students and instead arrested the dictator himself. Touré presided over the transition from autocracy to de mocracy, organised a National Conference that dre w up a ne w constitution, and handed pow er a year later to Alpha O umar Konare, M ali’s first de mocratically elected president. Touré rejoined politics 10 years later and w as elected president in 2002, until being ousted in 2012. Since 2013, he is reportedly living in exile in Dakar, Senegal. In early 2014, the M ali National Asse mbly swore in a ne w High Court of Justice to hear a case of treason against Touré in relation to events leading to the 2012 conflict. The power of drug money in Mali Part 4: Conclusion: Reason for hope 20 The power of drug money in Mali Appendix 21 Part 4: Conclusion: Reason for hope Appendix: Initiatives that deal with the West African drugs trade W here governance and de mocracy are w eak, criminal and terrorist net works flourish. M ali w as the first SahelSaharan country to be convulsed by this proble m and se e its governm ent collapse. O ther countries share similar proble ms – a vast ungovernable territory, corruption and the trafficking of illicit goods. They could follow suit. To avoid simply displacing proble ms from one country to another, any solutions ne ed to adopt a regional approach. Governm ents or their representatives, com munities and the private sector, must be insulated from involve m ent in organised criminal activity. African Union/ECOWAS initiatives M ali does offer reason for cautious hope. Civil society engage m ent and debate on corruption and justice is buoyant. Civil society groups are conscious of the ne ed for judicial reform and ne w anti-corruption law s – Coulibaly and his draft law re main strong anti-corruption references. N e wly elected M Ps and returning refuge es, eager to secure their hom e areas, are also involved. Such widespread engage m ent is encouraging. The anti-corruption move m ent will ne ed to muster all its energy and stamina to construct ne w legitimate de mocratic processes and bring an end to the culture of political involve m ent in organised crim e. Since the 1990s, there have be en many initiatives e m erging from Africa to address the proble m of the narcotics trade. In 2013, the African Union (AU) developed a Plan of Action on Drug Control (2013-2017), the fourth revised plan of its kind. It se eks to strengthen continental and international cooperation, and further integrate drug control issues into national legal and institutional fram e works.132 In 1998, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Authority of H eads of State and Governm ent Sum mit issued a declaration: Community Flame Ceremony – the Fight Against Drugs. In the sam e year, it also set up the Regional Fund for Financing of Drug Control Activities in W est Africa and the D ecisions on the Establishm ent of the Inter- Governm ental Action Group against M oney Laundering in W est Africa. In 2008, it adopted a follow-up plan: a Regional Action Plan against Drug A buse, Trafficking and Organized Crim e, w hich aims to address the drug proble m in an integrated manner.133 In 2008, E C O W AS adopted the Praia Political Declaration and Regional Plan of Action to address the security threats posed by drug trafficking in the sub-region. O ut of this m e eting, the U N O D C, with input from bodies such as Interpol and the EU, led the process of creating an E C O W AS Imple m entation Plan and a M onitoring and Evaluation M echanism to help E C O W AS states translate the D eclaration and Plan of Action into concrete program m es.134 Almost all E C O W AS states have adopted National Integrated Programmes. M any have am ended their drug trafficking and consumption legislation, e mpow ered their judicial authorities, established ne w drug-enforce m ent agencies and imposed stiffer penalties for offenders. In 2009, the West Africa Coastal Initiative w as launched as an initiative of the U N O ffice for W est Africa, the D epartm ent for Peaceke eping O perations, Interpol and the U N O D C. It is designed to support the E C O W AS regional action plan on drug trafficking. It aims to mitigate the impact of organised crim e along the W est Africa coast, through a program m e of capacity building, law-enforce m ent cooperation and the strengthening of the criminal justice syste m in Ivory Coast, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia and Sierra Leone. It has led to the establishm ent of transnational crim e units in each of these countries.135 The UNODC has also developed the Airport Com munication Project, in cooperation with Interpol, and in line with the E C O W AS regional action plan. This aims to promote intelligence sharing at airport and police level bet w e en Brazil and seven W est African states, nam ely Nigeria, Togo, Cape Verde, Ghana, M ali, Ivory Coast and Senegal. There is a lot of reflection about w hy, overall, the initiatives have failed to deliver significant results on the w ar on drugs. Reasons cited include: • lack of political will by m e mber states136,137 • lack of involve m ent by a strong civil society138 • complicity of corrupt officials in the drugs trade • lack of coordination resulting in the ‘balloon effect’, in w hich the proble m is simply displaced from one country to another.139 Perhaps in response to this proble m, the Kofi Annan Foundation launched the West African Commission on Drugs in 2013. This Com mission, chaired by form er President of Nigeria O lusegun O basanjo, brings together experts from the world of politics, civil society, health, security and the judiciary. It aims to ‘analyse the proble ms of trafficking and dependency in order to deliver an authoritative report and comprehensive policy recom m endations to tackle the proble m holistically, looking not only at law enforce m ent, but also at governance, developm ent and public health.’140 G8 In M ay 2011, the G8 launched the Action Plan on Transatlantic Drugs Trafficking to slow the transatlantic cocaine trade, with a particular focus on W est African routes. European Union The EU is developing a ne w law-enforce m ent policy cycle (2014-17). It will define w hat the main security threats are and establish som e clear operational goals and special tasks. Drugs and cigarettes smuggling are among its nine priority areas. The power of drug money in Mali Appendix 22 The power of drug money in Mali References 23 References UK Government The Serious Organised Crim e Agency (S O C A) aims to prevent the trafficking of drugs into the UK (via W est Africa and other regions). W ithin D FID, the issue of organised crim e is allegedly moving from the team working on governance to the team working on conflict/security. This would suggest that D FID is less interested in the issue of drugs trade as a governance issue affecting African governm ents. Research institutes/ NGOs There are many institutes in Africa, Europe and the A m ericas that are working on the issue of the W est African drugs trade and w hose research could be used to create the policy backbone of a drugs campaign. M any of these are cited as sources in this docum ent (both research and intervie w s). Wom en in Law and D evelopm ent and the Groupe de Suivi Bugetaire are t wo groups that are active on issues of corruption within M ali and would be worth forging links with, if a campaign on drugs w ere to go ahead. The only large UK-based international N G O working on the issue of drugs and governance is Christian Aid. In the run up to the U N G eneral Asse mbly Special Session on Drugs in 2016, it will be providing input, attending strategic workshops and doing advocacy work with the EU/O AS. There is a large (and growing) body of smaller research institutes and N G O s w ho are calling for the decriminalisation of cocaine, believing it to be the most effective w ay to address the proble m. At the EU’s Cocaine Route Conference in Rom e, M ay 2013, a Global Initiative on Transnational Organised Crim e w as launched that brings together civil society, N G O s and researchers with the aim of trying to fill voids in the program m es and strategies of law enforce m ent. It is too early to evaluate how this is going, but it is worth ke eping an eye on. Ameline N, A Cresce nt of Crisis o n Euro p e’s D o orste p: A N e w N orth-S o uth Strate gic Partn ership for th e S a h el, Draft Report, NATO Parliamentary Assembly, Defence and Security Committee, 2013, www.nato-pa.int/ shortcut.asp?FILE=3127 Foreign and Commonwealth Office, Traffickers a n d Terrorists: Dru gs a n d Viole nt Jih a d in M ali a n d th e Wid er S a h el, 2013, ww.gov.uk/government/ uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/256619/Oct_2013_ Traffickers_and_Terrorists.pdf Amnesty International, M ali: Five M o nths of Crisis, A rm e d Re b ellio n a n d M ilitary C o u p, Amnesty International, 2012, www.amnesty.org/en/ documents/AFR37/001/2012/en Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, M ali – M ètre: En q u ête d’o pinio n «Q u e p e nse nt les M alie ns»?, Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, 2013, http://library.fes.de/pdf-files/ bueros/mali/10100/2013-02.pdf Aning K, O rg a nise d Cri m e in W est A frica: O ptio ns for E U En g a g e m e nt, International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, 2009, www.idea.int/resources/analysis/loader.cfm?csmodule=security/ getfile&pageid=37849 Gallant TW, ‘Brigandage, piracy, capitalism and state-formations: Transnational crime from a historical world-systems perspective’, in Heyman J, ed, States a n d Ille g al Practices, Berg, 1999, p25-61. Aning K, ‘Review: A frica a n d th e W ar o n Dru gs ’, http://sites.tufts.edu/ reinventingpeace/2013/02/05/review-african-and-the-war-on-drugs/ Ba C, ‘Guerre au Mali et drogue : ATT avait libéré beaucoup trop de barons’, Maliactu, 20 March 2013, http://maliactu.info/crise-malienne/guerre-aumali-et-drogue-att-avait-libere-beaucoup-trop-de-barons Berghezan G, Pa n ora m a d u Trafic d e C ocaïn e e n A friq u e d e L’O u est, Groupe de Recherche et d’information sur la paix et la Sécurité, 2012, www.grip. org/sites/grip.org/files/RAPPORTS/2012/Rapport_2012-6.pdf Bond B, Hill P, ‘Al Qaeda’s £168million cocaine smugglers: terror group flooding Britain with drugs’, S u n d ay M irror, 28 April 2013, www.mirror. co.uk/news/uk-news/al-qaedas-168million-cocaine-smugglers-1857934 Callimachi R, Ahmed B, ‘Al Qaeda fighters carve out own country in Mali’, Associated Press, 15 January 2013, http://news.yahoo.com/al-qaida-carvesown-country-mali-194907091.html Gueye B, ‘MUJAO commander quits Mali terror group’, Maghrebia, 12 November 2012, http://allafrica.com/stories/201211131251.html Hirsch A, ‘Cocaine flows through Sahara as al-Qaida cashes in on lawlessness’, the G u ardia n , 2 May 2013, www.theguardian.com/world/2013/ may/02/cocaine-flows-through-sahara-al-qaida Inkster N, Comolli V, Dru gs, Insecurity a n d Faile d States, Routledge, 2012. International Crisis Group, ‘Mali: Avoiding Escalation’, Africa Report 189, 2012, www.crisisgroup.org/en/regions/africa/west-africa/mali/189-maliavoiding-escalation.aspx International Crisis Group, ‘Mali: Reform or Relapse’, Africa Report 210, 2014, www.crisisgroup.org/en/regions/africa/west-africa/mali/210-malireform-or-relapse.aspx International Crisis Group, ‘The Central Sahel: A Perfect Sandstorm’, Africa Report 227, 2015, www.crisisgroup.org/en/regions/africa/west-africa/227the-central-sahel-a-perfect-sandstorm.aspx Callimachi R, Ahmed B, ‘How to evade drones: Al Qaeda tips on evading unmanned aircraft found in Mali’. Associated Press, 21 February 2013, www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/21/how-to-avoid-drones-al-qaeda-tipsmali_n_2734347.html International Institute for Strategic Studies, ‘West Africa’s “cocaine coast”’, Strate gic C o m m e nts, 2011, http://unidad-intel-latinoamerica.webnode.com. ar/news/africa-latinoamerica-alianza-narcoterrorista-/ Coulibaly M, Bratton M, ‘Crisis in Mali: Ambivalent popular attitudes on the way forward’, Sta bility, 2013, 2(2), pp1-10 Jeune Afrique, ‘Le conflit malien perturbe le trafic de cocaïne vers l’Europe’, 10 March 2013, www.jeuneafrique.com/Article/DEPAFP20130310112035/ Cuming A, ‘Drug Smuggling’, in Intern atio n al O rg a nize d Cri m e: th e A frica n Ex p erie nce , ISPAC, 2010, www.cnpds.it/documenti/ fb95a6fd7f209916197336323df897de.pdf Konaté D, ‘The situation in northern Mali: seeking to understand paths to a solution’. Lecture, March 2009. Daniel S, ‘Scores of new African recruits swell Qaeda offshoot’s ranks in Mali’, 18 July 2012, Middle East Online, www.middle-east-online.com/ english/?id=53459 Diallo T, ‘Four arrested in “Air Cocaine” investigation’, Reuters, 24 March 2011. Diarra A, ‘Drogue : 5 Kg de coke dans uns sac de couchage pour bebe’, 31 December 2013, http://maliactu.net/drogue-5-kg-de-coke-dans-un-sac-decouchage-pour-bebe/ Dreazen Y, ‘Welcome to Cocainebougou’, 27 March 2013, www. foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/03/27/welcome_to_cocainebougou_mali Th e Eco n o m ist, ‘Boom, boom: North African governments struggle to stem the illegal flow of arms and drugs’, 17 August 2013, www.economist. com/news/middle-east-and-africa/21583671-north-african-governmentsstruggle-stem-illegal-flow-arms-and-drugs-boom Ellis S, ‘West Africa’s international drug trade’, A frica n A ffairs, 2009, 108(431), p173-196, http://afraf.oxfordjournals.org/content/108/431/171.full Kone Y, Lesso ns fro m M ali’s A ra b S prin g: W hy D e m ocracy M ust W ork for th e Po or, Occasional Paper, Christian Aid, 2012, christianaid.org.uk/images/ lessons-from-mali.pdf Kyei AA, Fin din g a Fix: Th e Rise of Dru g Traffickin g a n d U sa g e in W est A frica, 2012. Lacher W, O rg a nise d Cri m e a n d C o nflict in th e S a h ara-S a h el Re gio n , Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 2012, http:// carnegieendowment.org/files/sahel_sahara.pdf LebovichA, ‘Mali’s bad trip: field notes from the West African drug trade’, 19 March 2013, www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/03/15/mali_s_bad_trip Lewis D, Diarra A, ‘In Mali, land of “gangster-jihadists”, ransoms help fuel the movement’, Reuters, 27 October 2012, http://investigations.nbcnews. com/_news/2012/10/27/14703406-in-mali-land-of-gangster-jihadistsransoms-help-fuel-the-movement Maïga AK, ‘Blanchiment d’argent du terrorisme, de la drogue et de la contrebande’, L’O rie nt-Le-Jo ur, 13 October 2010, www.diasporaction.com/ component/content/article?id=1156 The power of drug money in Mali References 24 The power of drug money in Mali Endnotes 25 Endnotes Marchal R, Is a M ilitary Interve ntio n in M ali U n avoid a ble?, NOREF, 2012, www.peacebuilding.no/eng/Regions/Africa/Mali/Publications/Is-a-militaryintervention-in-Mali-unavoidable Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, Military Expenditure Database, 2013, http://milexdata.sipri.org/files/?file=SIPRI+military+expend iture+database+1988-2012.xlsx Maru MT, ‘AFISMA: Military ahead of politics’, Al Jazeera Centre for Studies, 13 February 2013, http://studies.aljazeera.net/en/ reports/2013/02/20132148940690455.htm Tamoudre, ‘Un avion cargo contenant des stupéfiants et des armes atterrit à Gao’, Tamoudre, 18 April 2012, www.tamoudre.org/un-avion-cargocontenant-des-stupefiants-et-des-armes-atterrit-a-gao/geostrategie/ resistance/rebellions/ McElroy D, ‘Al-Qaeda’s scathing letter to troublesome employee Mokhtar Belmokhtar reveals inner workings of terrorist group’, the Tele gra p h, 29 May 2013, www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/al-qaeda/10085716/ Al-Qaedas-scathing-letter-to-troublesome-employee-Mokhtar-Belmokhtarreveals-inner-workings-of-terrorist-group.html Melly P, ‘The sad decline of Mali’, Th e W orld To d ay, Chatham House, Royal Institute of International Affairs, August 2012, www.chathamhouse.org/ publications/twt/archive/view/185099 Tlemçani C, ‘Au Sahel, narcotrafiquants et terroristes se partagent le terrain’, Algeria-Watch, 1 November 2010, www.algeria-watch.org/fr/ article/pol/geopolitique/narcotraficants_terroristes.htm UNODC, Tra nsn atio n al O rg a nise d Cri m e in W est A frica: A Thre at A ssess m e nt, UNODC, 2013, www.unodc.org/documents/data-andanalysis/tocta/West_Africa_TOCTA_2013_EN.pdf Musilli P, Smith P, Th e La w less Ro a ds: A n O vervie w of Turb ule nce A cross th e S a h el, NOREF, 2013, www.peacebuilding.no/var/ezflow_site/storage/ original/application/e2cc78a2ce149944b9a35b4ce42759b9.pdf van de Walle N, Foreig n A id in D a n g ero us Places: Th e D o n ors a n d M ali’s D e m ocracy, UNU-WIDER, 2012, www.wider.unu.edu/publications/workingpapers/2012/en_GB/wp2012-061/ News24, ‘Mali makes record coke seizure’, 29 December 2007, www. news24.com/Africa/News/Mali-makes-record-coke-seizure-20071229 van Vliet M, ‘The Challenges of Retaking Northern Mali’, CTC S e ntin el, 2012, 5(11-12), pp1-4, www.ctc.usma.edu/posts/the-challenges-of-retakingnorthern-mali NigerDiaspora, ‘Agadez : plus de 313,645 kg de chanvre indien, 58 kg de cocaïne, 45.344 comprimés de tramadol et de diazépam incinérés, 1 July 2013, www.nigerdiaspora.info/index.php/les-infos-du-pays/societe/ item/64427-agadez--plus-de-313645-kg-de-chanvre-indien-58-kg-decocaïne-45344-comprimés-de-tramadol-et-de-diazépam-incinérés OECD, ‘Northern Mali at a Glance’, OECD Sahel and West Africa Club, 2010, www.oecd.org/swac/northernmaliataglance.htm 2. 3. UNODC, U N O D C Re gio n al Pro gra m m e for W est A frica, 2010–2014, UNODC, 2012, www.unodc.org/documents/westandcentralafrica//FINAL_ CONSOLIDATED_nov22.pdf Morgan A, ‘The causes of the uprising in northern Mali’, Think Africa Press, 6 February 2012. N’guessan P, ‘Bamako: Dans l’univers de la drogue’, 10 March 2012, www. maliweb.net/societe/banditismeinsecurite/bamako-dans-lunivers-de-ladrogue-53771.html 1. 4. 5. Abdoul Karim Maïga, ‘Blanchiment d’argent du terrorisme, de la drogue et de la contrebande’, October 2010. These are findings from anthropological research, as discussed in J Scheele, S m ug glers an d Saints of the Sahara , Cambridge University Press, 2012, p96. See also note 5: ‘[Saad, the interpreter] served as chauffeur to a smuggler who once became very rich, moved to Oran where he opened an import company. Saad said of the smuggler: “The money he has made here through fraud allows him to live and support his children over several generations. He even trafficked arms and drugs. Today, he has become a hajj and commands much devotion and much respect in Oran.”’ Wood D, ‘Libyan weapons arming Al Qaeda militias across North Africa, officials say’, Huffington Post, 20 February 2013, www.huffingtonpost. com/2013/02/20/libyan-weapons-al-qaeda-north-africa_n_2727326.html 8. Scheele J, S m u g glers a n d S aints of th e S a h ara: Re gio n al C o n n ectivity in th e Tw e ntieth C e ntury, Cambridge University Press, 2012. Shaw M, Le a d ership Re q uire d: Dru g Traffickin g a n d th e Crisis of State h o o d in W est A frica, Institute for Security Studies Policy Brief 37, 2012, www. issafrica.org/uploads/No37Oct2012Drugs.pdf Starkey J, ‘Mayor Accused of Sheltering Two of Mali’s Most Wanted’, the Ti m es, 16 February 2013, www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/news/world/africa/ article3687438.ece Afua Hirsch, ‘Cocaine flows through Sahara as al-Qaida cashes in on lawlessness’, the G uardian , 2 May 2013, www.theguardian. com/world/2013/may/02/cocaine-flowsthrough-sahara-al-qaida 7. Ouazani C, ‘Mali : «Tessalit connection» avec Deity Ag Sidimou’, Jeune Afrique, 17 October 2011, www.jeuneafrique.com/189772/politique/malitessalit-connection-avec-deity-ag-sidimou Sidibé K, S ecurity M a n a g e m e nt in N orth ern M ali: Cri m in al N et w orks a n d C o nflict Resolutio n M ech a nis m s, Institute of Development Studies, Research Report 77, 2012, www.ids.ac.uk/files/dmfile/RR77.pdf As described in two reports in Foreig n Policy : Andrew Lebovich, ‘Mali’s bad trip: field notes from the West African drug trade’, 19 March 2013, www.foreignpolicy. com/articles/2013/03/15/mali_s_bad_ trip; and Yochi Dreazen, ‘Welcome to Cocainebougou’, 27 March 2013, www. foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/03/27/ welcome_to_cocainebougou_mali See note 3, Lebovich; and Diallo’s interview with Tim es correspondent Jerome Starkey, ‘Mayor Accused of Sheltering Two of Mali’s Most Wanted’, the Ti m es , 16 February 2013, www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/news/world/africa/ article3687438.ece OECD, Th e S ecurity-D e velo p m e nt N e xus: Re gio n al C h alle n g es, 2012, www. oecd.org/swac/events/colloque_EN.pdf Reitano T, Shaw M, C h eck Yo ur Blin d S p ot: C o nfro ntin g Cri m in al S p oilers in th e S a h el, Institute for Security Studies Policy Brief 39, 2013, www. issafrica.org/uploads/No39Sahel_14Mar2013V2.pdf OECD, ‘Northern Mali at a Glance’, OECD Sahel and West Africa Club, 2010, www. oecd.org/swac/northernmaliataglance.htm 6. Walt V, ‘Conflicting priorities imperil efforts to gather Gaddafi’s discarded arms’, Ti m e , 15 November 2011, http://content.time.com/time/world/ article/0,8599,2099549,00.html Whitehouse B, ‘Mali’s coup, one year on’, Bridges from Bamako, 22 March 2013, http://bridgesfrombamako.com/2013/03/22/malis-coup-one-year-on/ Thomas W Gallant, ‘Brigandage, piracy, capitalism and state-formations: transnational crime from a historical worldsystems perspective’, in J Heyman, ed, States an d Ille gal Practices , Berg, 1999, p38. 9. The notion that ‘not all that is illegal is wrong’ has a long history and is something repeated in many societies. For example, while it is illegal under English law to sleep under bridges, it is not wrong for homeless rough sleepers to sleep under bridges, even if they are arrested for doing it. Laws that define illegality reflect what the powerful prescribe to be right or wrong. There are times when those definitions can be challenged. Cheikh Ba, ‘Guerre au Mali et drogue : ATT avait libéré beaucoup trop de barons’, Maliactu, 20 March 2013, http://maliactu. info/crise-malienne/guerre-au-mali-etdrogue-att-avait-libere-beaucoup-trop-debarons 10. See note 3, Lebovich; and Martin van Vliet, ‘The Challenges of Retaking Northern Mali’, CTC S e ntin el , 2012, 5(11-12), pp1-4. 11. ‘Boom, boom: North African governments struggle to stem the illegal flow of arms and drugs’, the Econ o m ist , 17 August 2013. 12. See note 7, Scheele, pp95-124. A pertinent example of this is cigarette and drug smuggler Mokthar Belmokhtar, an Algerian Arab who has married into both the Berabiche Arabs near Timbuktu and a nomadic Tuareg clan in the north. 13. OECD, The S ecurity-D evelo p m e nt N exus: Re gional C halle ng es , 2012, www.oecd.org/ swac/events/colloque_EN.pdf 14. Andrew Cuming, ‘Drug Smuggling’, in International O rganize d Crim e: the African Exp erie nce , ISPAC, 2010. 15. National Crime Agency, ‘Drugs’, www. nationalcrimeagency.gov.uk/crime-threats/ drugs. The value of £200m is calculated based on figures in Nigel Inkster and Virginia Comolli, Drugs, Insecurity an d Faile d States , Routledge, 2012. Inskter was once head of operations for MI6, the British Secret Intelligence Service. 16. International Crisis Group, ‘Mali: Reform or Relapse’, Africa Report 210, 2014; and International Crisis Group, ‘The Central Sahel: A Perfect Sandstorm’, Africa Report 227, 2015. 17. UNODC, Transnational O rganise d Crim e in W est Africa: A Thre at A ssess m e nt , UNODC, 2013, p11. 18. Ibid. 19. International Institute for Strategic Studies, ‘West Africa’s “cocaine coast”’, Strate gic C o m m e nts , 2011. 20. See note 17, p17-18. 21. As suggested by Yury Fedotov, UNODC chief, in ‘Executive Director: West Africa challenged by rapidly evolving transnational threats’, 22 February 2012, www.unodc. org/unodc/en/frontpage/2012/February/ executive-director_-west-africa-challengedby-rapidly-evolving-transnational-threats. html 22. See note 17, pp10-11. 23. From a lecture by Professor Dalla Konaté in March 2009 entitled, ‘The situation in northern Mali: seeking to understand paths to a solution’. The case study writer was a participant in the lecture. 24. News24, ‘Mali makes record coke seizure’, 29 December 2007. 25. Georges Berghezan, Pan ora m a d u Trafic d e C ocaïn e e n Afriq ue d e L’O uest , Groupe de Recherche et d’information sur la paix et la Sécurité, 2012. 26. See note 17, p14. 27. See note 17, p13. 28. Paul N’guessan, ‘Bamako: Dans l’univers de la drogue’, 10 March 2012, www.maliweb. net/societe/banditismeinsecurite/bamakodans-lunivers-de-la-drogue-53771.html 29. A Diarra, ‘Drogue : 5 Kg de coke dans uns sac de couchage pour bebe’, 31 December 2013, http://maliactu.net/drogue-5-kg-decoke-dans-un-sac-de-couchage-pour-bebe/ 30. Djamila Ould Khettab, ‘La Mauritanie saisit une tonne de drogue à la frontière avec l’Algérie’, 29 April 213, www.algerie-focus. com/blog/2013/04/la-mauritanie-saisitune-tonne-de-drogue-a-la-frontiere-avecalgerie/ 31. See note 11. 32. NigerDiaspora, ‘Agadez : plus de 313,645 kg de chanvre indien, 58 kg de cocaïne, 45.344 comprimés de tramadol et de diazépam incinérés, 1 July 2013; and Foreign and Commonwealth Office, Traffickers an d Terrorists: Drugs an d Viole nt Jiha d in M ali an d the Wid er Sahel , 2013, paragraph 25. 33. Jeune Afrique, ‘Le conflit malien perturbe le trafic de cocaïne vers l’Europe’, 10 March 2013. 34. Pietro Musilli and Patrick Smith, The La w less Roa ds: A n O vervie w of Turb ule nce A cross the Sahel , NOREF, 2013; and Tuesday Reitano and Mark Shaw, C heck Yo ur Blin d S p ot: C onfrontin g Criminal S p oilers in the Sahel , Institute for Security Studies Policy Brief 39, 2013. 35. David Lewis and Adama Diarra, ‘In Mali, land of “gangster-jihadists”, ransoms help fuel the movement’, Reuters, 27 October 2012. 36. See note 4. 37. Former Mali president, Amadou Toumani Touré, often called ATT, is currently in a high treason probe for offering no resistance to the presence of ‘foreign invaders’, which led to the outbreak of conflict in 2012. The reason offered for his lack of resistance was the demoralisation of the army because of poor appointments. However, it is certainly feasible that government officials themselves are linked to these invaders. They have long-standing ties with Arab businessmen in the region, many of whom The power of drug money in Mali Endnotes 26 are known as hard-nosed entrepreneurs and smugglers. 38. For a neat summary of the role of ‘social capital’ in the growth of the drugs trade, its success in outwitting the law, and political duality of the West African state, see Kwesi Aning, ‘Review: Africa an d the W ar on Drugs ’, http://sites.tufts.edu/ reinventingpeace/2013/02/05/reviewafrican-and-the-war-on-drugs/ 39. See note 34. 40. See note 17, p1. 41. See note 3, Lebovich. 42. Mehari Taddele Maru, ‘AFISMA: Military ahead of politics’, Al Jazeera Centre for Studies, 13 February 2013. 43. These are average figures from 1986-2005, as cited in Phillip Killicoat, W e a p on o mics: The G lo b al M arket for A ssa ult Rifles, World Bank Policy Research Working Paper, www-wds.worldbank.org/servlet/ WDSContentServer/WDSP/IB/2007/04/13/0 00016406_20070413145045/Rendered/PDF/ wps4202.pdf 44. Kalilou Sidibé, S ecurity M ana g e m e nt in N orthern M ali: Criminal N et w orks an d C onflict Resolution M echanis m s , IDS, 2012. 45. SIPRI Military Expenditure Database, http:// milexdata.sipri.org/files/?file=SIPRI+military +expenditure+database+1988-2012.xlsx trafic-de-drogue-au-mali-un-fleau-protegeet-une-mafia-au-sommet-47976.html; and Stéphanie Plasse, ‘Pr Baba Koumaré : au Mali, « la consommation de drogues est facilitée par le narcotrafic »’, Jeune Afrique, 27 November 2013, www.jeuneafrique. com/167136/societe/pr-baba-koumar-aumali-la-consommation-de-drogues-estfacilit-e-par-le-narcotrafic/ 55. ‘Mali a “wake-up call” for drug trafficking, says think tank’, www.irinnews.org/ Report/97412/Mali-a-wake-up-call-for-drugtrafficking-says-think-tank 56. Kwesi Aning, O rg a nise d Cri m e in W est A frica: O ptio ns for E U En g a g e m e nt , International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, 2009. www.idea.int/resources/analysis/ loader.cfm?csmodule=security/ getfile&pageid=37849 57. Yacouba Kone, Lessons fro m M ali’s Ara b S prin g: W hy D e m ocracy M ust W ork for the Po or, Occasional Paper, Christian Aid, 2012. 58. Ibid, pp2-3. 59. See note 47. 60. Wikileaks, ‘Tuaregs and Arabs clash over drugs and cash in northern Mali’, www.wikileaks.org/plusd/ cables/07BAMAKO960_a.html 61. See note 3, Lebovich. 46. Vivienne Walt, ‘Conflicting priorities imperil efforts to gather Gaddafi’s discarded arms’, Tim e , 15 November 2011. 62. Tiemoko Diallo, ‘Four arrested in “Air Cocaine” investigation’, Reuters, 24 March 2011. 47. Paul Melly, ‘The sad decline of Mali’, The W orld To d ay, Chatham House, Royal Institute of International Affairs, August 2012. 63. Andy Morgan, ‘The causes of the uprising in northern Mali’, Think Africa Press, 6 February 2012. 48. Mouna Izdinne, cited in note 44, p27. 49. Operation Serval was the name of the French military operation to oust Islamic and secessionist militants in the north of Mali, which started in December 2012 and officially ended in July 2014. 50. Nicole Ameline, A Cresce nt of Crisis on Euro p e’s D o orste p: A N e w N orth-S o uth Strate gic Partn ership for the Sahel , Draft Report, NATO Parliamentary Assembly, Defence and Security Committee, 2013. 51. David Wood, ‘Libyan weapons arming Al Qaeda militias across North Africa, officials say’, Huffington Post, 20 February 2013. 52. Private email communication with Violet Diallo, who was present at the validation meeting. 53. UNODC, U N O D C Re gional Pro gra m m e for W est Africa, 2010–2014 , UNODC, 2012, p3. 54. ‘Trafic de drogue au Mali : Un fléau protégé et une mafia au sommet’, Maliweb, 15 February 2012, www.maliweb.net/societe/ 64. Salima Tlemçani, ‘Au Sahel, narcotrafiquants et terroristes se partagent le terrain’, Algeria-Watch, 1 November 2010, www.algeria-watch.org/fr/article/pol/ geopolitique/narcotraficants_terroristes. htm 65. Cherif Ouazani, ‘Mali : «Tessalit connection» avec Deity Ag Sidimou’, Jeune Afrique, 17 October 2011. 66. Chiekh Ba, ‘Guerre au Mali et drogue : ATT avait libéré beaucoup trop de barons’, Maliactu, http://maliactu.info/crisemalienne/guerre-au-mali-et-drogue-attavait-libere-beaucoup-trop-de-barons. Ba’s report suggests this wasn’t the first time that President Touré had intervened for the release of drug barons. 67. Ibid. 68. See note 6, Starkey. 69. See note 34, Reitano and Shaw. 70. Stephen Ellis, ‘West Africa’s international drug trade’, African Affairs , 2009, 108(431), p173 and p194. 71. See note 19. 72. For example, see note 54, Plasse. In this interview, Professor Baba Koumaré, chief psychiatrist at Bamako’s Point G hospital, states that drug-related psychiatric illnesses are increasing commensurate to the increase in the use of cannabis, cocaine and crack cocaine. 73. See note 17, p5. 74. Bill Bond and Patrick Hill, ‘Al Qaeda’s £168million cocaine smugglers: terror group flooding Britain with drugs’, S un d ay M irror, 28 April 2013. 75. See note 34, Musilli and Smith, p5. 76. ‘Un avion cargo contenant des stupéfiants et des armes atterrit à Gao’, Tamoudre, 18 April 2012, www.tamoudre.org/unavion-cargo-contenant-des-stupefiantset-des-armes-atterrit-a-gao/geostrategie/ resistance/rebellions/ 77. See note 66. 78. DEA, ‘Three al Qaeda associates arrested on drug and terrorism charges’, DEA, 18 December 2009, www.dea.gov/pubs/ pressrel/pr121809.html 79. See note 3, Dreazen. 80. See note 3, Lebovich. 81. Wolfram Lacher, O rganise d Crim e an d C onflict in the Sa hara-Sahel Re gion , Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 2012. 82. Damien McElroy, ‘Al-Qaeda’s scathing letter to troublesome employee Mokhtar Belmokhtar reveals inner workings of terrorist group’, the Tele gra p h , 29 May 2013. 83. ‘Chad President Deby: Al-Qaeda’s Abou Zeid killed in Mali’, BBC, 2 March 2013, www.bbc.co.uk/news/worldafrica-21637829 84. Rukmini Callimachi and Baba Ahmed, ‘Al Qaeda fighters carve out own country in Mali’, Associated Press, 15 January 2013. The power of drug money in Mali Endnotes 27 released under pressure by the Spanish government in a kidnap exchange packaged by the Malian government. In 2013, Malian prosecutors issued an arrest warrant for Rouji and Ould Taher on drug smuggling charges. 89. Bakari Gueye, ‘MUJAO commander quits Mali terror group’, Maghrebia, 12 November 2012. 90. ‘Mali hostages “were released in exchange for prisoners”’, BBC, 19 July 2012, www. bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-18917078 91. Amnesty International, M ali: Five M onths of Crisis, Arm e d Re b ellion an d M ilitary C o up, 2012. 92. See note 10, van Vliet. 93. In 2004, jobs directly and indirectly linked to tourism were estimated at 13,000 and contributed to the livelihoods of more than 60,000 people. Between 2004 and 2010, Mali’s tourism revenues doubled. In 2010, tourists spent €240m in Mali, and figures were expected to grow. See note 13, p14. 94. See note 84. 95. From Naffet Keita’s report, cited in note 13, p4. 96. Serge Daniel, ‘Scores of new African recruits swell Qaeda offshoot’s ranks in Mali’, 18 July 2012, Middle East Online, www.middle-east-online.com/ english/?id=53459 97. For full text of the UN press briefing, see www.un.org/press/en/2012/121010_Guest. doc.htm 98. See note 84. 99. International Crisis Group, ‘Mali: Avoiding Escalation’, Africa Report 189, 2012. 100. From the US Embassy Bamako cables, as reported by Wikileaks, and cited in note 81, p6. Ag Bahanga was killed in a car crash in August 2011. 101. For more on the KFR business and the millions AQIM earns, see the briefing ‘Killing the Cash Cow’ at www.jolibatrust.org; and Roland Marchal, Is a M ilitary Interve ntion in M ali U navoid a ble?, NOREF, 2012. 108. A discussion in English on the findings of the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung survey can be found on Bruce Whitehouse’s blog: ‘Mali’s coup, one year on’, Bridges from Bamako, 22 March 2013, http://bridgesfrombamako. com/2013/03/22/malis-coup-one-year-on/ 119. AidData, http://aiddata.org 109. World Bank, http://databank.worldbank.org; and CPIA Transparency, Accountability and Corruption in the Public Sector database, http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/IQ.CPA. TRAN.XQ 121. Nicolas van de Walle, Foreig n A id in D an g ero us Places: The D on ors an d M ali’s D e m ocracy, UNU-WIDER, 2012, www.wider. unu.edu/publications/working-papers/2012/ en_GB/wp2012-061/ 110. All figures sourced from http:// www3.weforum.org/docs/WEF_ GlobalCompetitivenessReport_2012-13. pdf (p248) and the UN Secretary-General’s report on the elections. 122. Bruce Whitehouse, ‘What went wrong in Mali?’ Lon d on Revie w of B o oks , 2012, 34(16), 17-18, www.lrb.co.uk/v34/n16/brucewhitehouse/what-went-wrong-in-mali 111. Massa Coulibaly and Michael Bratton, ‘Crisis in Mali: Ambivalent popular attitudes on the way forward’, Sta bility, 2013, 2(2), pp1-10. Coulibaly and Bratton called this ‘ambivalent popular attitudes’. The view of this paper, however, is that this is not ambivalence, but rather an affirmation of a preference for democracy despite how it has been hijacked or given its present form by current rulers. 112. All quotes in this and the next paragraph were sourced from: ‘Corruption is for everyone! (Part 2)’, http:// bridgesfrombamako.com/2013/02/28/ corruption-is-for-everyone-part-2/ 126. World Bank, Mali, www.worldbank.org/en/ country/mali/overview 127. See note 47. 128. See note 126. 129. See note 121. 132. A U Plan of A ction on Drug C ontrol (20132017), http://sa.au.int/en/sites/default/ files/AUPA%20on%20DC%20%2820132017%29%20-%20English.pdf 115. Soumaila T Diarra, ‘Mali to adopt a new anti-corruption law’, 12 June 2013, www. trust.org/item/20130612082953-psf9m 102. See note 81. 103. See note 66. 104. Monica Mark, ‘US suspends Mali’s military aid after coup’, 26 March 2012, www. guardian.co.uk/world/2012/mar/26/uspauses-mali-military-aid-coup 117. Oxfam, M ali : un n o uve a u contrat p o ur le d évelo p p e m e nt , Oxfam, 2013, www.oxfam. org/sites/www.oxfam.org/files/bn-malinew-development-contract-150513-fr.pdf 105. John Norris and Connie Veillette, En ga g e m e nt A mid A usterity, Center for American Progress, 2012, www. americanprogress.org/wp-content/uploads/ issues/2012/05/pdf/foreign_aid.pdf 118. ‘Grand procès anti-corruption en novembre 2014 : Pour la justice du peuple ou celle du vainqueur ?’, http://depechesdumali. com/8-a-la-une/3601-lutte-contre-lacorruption-l-ancien-prefet-de-kati-et-descadres-des-domaines-bientot-devant-leprocureur-de-la-commune-iii.html 107. See note 57, p5 . 125. See note 122. 114. In 2008, for example, there was open conflict between the VEGAL Sidi Sosso Diarra and the judiciary that required the intervention of President Touré. Mr Diarra went on to complete his term of office. 86. See note 35 106. See note 57, p3 . 124. P Bender et al, Evaluation of the World Bank Assistance to Primary Education in Mali, World Bank, 2007, http://ieg.worldbank.org/ Data/reports/mali_education.pdf 130. Interview with Youssouf 116. Lassina Niangaly, ‘2014, année de lutte contre la corruption: Après l’espoir, l’heure des interrogations’, Maliactu. 4 July 2014, http://maliactu.net/2014-annee-de-luttecontre-la-corruption-apres-lespoir-lheuredes-interrogations/ 88. See note 81. Lacher carried out interviews with prominent members of Tuareg and Arab communities from Gao and Timbuktu during 2012. Lacher also documents how Rouji was charged with drug smuggling in Mauritania, extradited to Mali in 2010, 123. Rizza Leonzon, ‘Global Fund halts AIDS funding for Mali’, 3 March 2011, www.devex. com/en/news/blogs/global-fund-halts-aidsfunding-for-mali 113. ‘Corruption au Mali: La remise du rapport 2012 du Vérificateur Général au président de la République’, Bamako.com, 26 November 2013, http://news.abamako.com/h/32824. html 85. See note 3, Dreazen; see note 33; and ‘Feds look into al-Qaeda african drug connection’, 21 December 2009, http://newsone. com/390297/feds-look-into-al-qaedaafrican-drug-connection/ 87. Quoted in David Lewis, ‘West Africa drugs trade going the way of Mexico – UN’, Reuters, 20 June 2011, www.reuters. com/article/2011/06/20/africa-drugs-unidAFLDE75J1YC20110620 120. J Glennie, ‘Can Mali be weaned off aid?’, G uardian , 17 February 2011, www. guardian.co.uk/global-development/ poverty-matters/2011/feb/17/mali-end-aiddependence 131. EC, ‘€3.25 billion mobilised by international community to rebuild Mali’, press release, 15 May 2013, http://europa.eu/rapid/pressrelease_IP-13-429_en.htm 133. ECOWAS, http://news. ecowas.int/presseshow. php?nb=108&lang=en&annee=2011 134. UNODC, www.unodc.org/unodc/en/drugtrafficking/west-and-central-africa.html 135. UNOWA, http://unowa.unmissions.org/ Default.aspx?tabid=841 136. Conversation with Jerome Spinoza, EEASS. 137. Mark Shaw, Le a d ership Re q uire d: Drug Traffickin g an d the Crisis of State h o o d in W est Africa, Institute for Security Studies Policy Brief 37, 2012. 138. Afia Kyei Asare, Fin din g a Fix, 2012. 139. See note 19. Also author interview with Ivan Briscoe, Clingandael Institute, Netherlands, who calls it the ‘waterbed’ effect. 140. Kofi Annan Foundation, http:// kofiannanfoundation.org; and West Africa Commission on Drugs, www. wacommissionondrugs.org UK registered charity no. 1105851 Company no. 5171525 Scot charity no. SC039150 Christian Aid Ireland: NI charity no. NIC101631 Company no. NI059154 and ROI charity no. 20014162 Company no. 426928. The Christian Aid name and logo are trademarks of Christian Aid. Christian Aid is a key member of ACT Alliance. © Christian Aid October 2015 J4400