A security vacuum in the Sahel has left Timbuktu blockaded by Islamist militants
By Emmanuel AkinwotuWorkers in front of the doors of a revered 15th-century mosque in 2016. The doors were hacked apart by jihadists in Mali's ancient city of Timbuktu in 2012 and now unveiled restored to their former glory. Now the city is under siege again. Sebastien Rieussec/AFP via Getty Images hide caption
toggle caption Sebastien Rieussec/AFP via Getty Images Sebastien Rieussec/AFP via Getty ImagesThe ancient city of Timbuktu in Mali is suffering under a months-long blockade by Islamist militants, as instability grows in a region of the Sahel in West Africa.
ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:
The ancient city of Timbuktu in Mali has been blockaded by Islamist militants for more than two months now. The UNESCO World Heritage city sits in a region in West Africa that has endured decades of instability. The withdrawal of French troops last year and the ongoing departure of United Nations peacekeepers has created a security vacuum in an area of the Sahel that is reeling from a spate of coups. NPR's Emmanuel Akinwotu reports.
EMMANUEL AKINWOTU, BYLINE: Thirty-five-year-old Mahmoud Gassamba says his city is under siege.
MAHMOUD GASSAMBA: (Non-English language spoken).
AKINWOTU: He says the prices of food and produce have doubled, and stocks that were brought south from Algeria to markets across his city have emptied. Timbuktu has an almost mythical status, seen as one of the cradles of Islamic scholarship. It had been experiencing a period of relative peace in recent years, after insurgents took over the city in 2012. But now it's on the front line of the fighting again.
GASSAMBA: (Non-English language spoken).
AKINWOTU: Gassamba says people feel afraid to leave their homes and that there's no help. In mid-August, JNIM, an al-Qaida-linked terrorist group, made a declaration of war on Timbuktu. Now thousands of people on the edge of the Sahara have been shut off from the outside world with no routes in and out by road, air or along the Niger River.
ULF LAESSING: There is a direct consequence between the U.N. withdrawal and what's happening in Timbuktu and the rest of the north.
AKINWOTU: Ulf Laessing is based in the Malian capital, Bamako, and is Sahel program director for the Konrad Adenauer Foundation. He says last year, the military ordered the U.N. peacekeeping force of about 13,000 to leave, and now insecurity is rising in northern Mali.
LAESSING: It was all part of a nationalist power play. You know, I mean, the government is under pressure. They have to show something.
AKINWOTU: Mali's new military leaders took power two years ago in the second of two coups within a year, riding a wave of dismay at insecurity and anger at French influence in its former colonies. It cut ties with France and established closer ties with Russia. The Wagner mercenary group now operates alongside the Malian army and has left a trail of human rights abuses in its wake.
GASSAMBA: (Non-English language spoken).
AKINWOTU: The government has claimed that the situation in Timbuktu is under control, but residents say otherwise. And Mahmoud Gassamba says the reality is that people in his city live in fear of what is to come.
Emmanuel Akinwotu, NPR News, Lagos.
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