Paris concludes prisoner exchange deal with al-Qaeda in Mali, pays €30m ransom
A prisoner exchange deal was concluded between France and Jamaat
Nusrat al-Islam wal Muslimeen (JNIM), which is loyal to al-Qaeda, in which
Paris played a major role after managing the hostage file, seeking to free those
detained by the terrorist group. The deal came after many months of
negotiations and resulted in 200 members of the terrorist group being released from
prison, while Paris paid €30 million in exchange for the group releasing Malian
opposition leader and veteran politician Soumaila Cisse and three other Western
prisoners. The Malian government was merely a spectator with no role, which led
the terrorist group to change its way of dealing after the French intervention.
Arduous negotiations
France went through arduous negotiations with the terrorist
group in Mali, where it started managing the hostage file, which was assigned
to the head of Malian intelligence. He was asked to include French aid worker Sophie
Petronin in the deal, in addition to two Italian hostages, while the Malian
government became a spectator. The file of the French hostage had been in the
possession of mediator Ahmada Ag Bibi for more than a year, while Nigerien
mediator Mohamadou Akwiti was working on the file of the two Italian hostages.
Akwiti is an influential figure from the Tuaregs of Niger.
He works as an advisor to Nigerien President Mohamadou Issoufou. He previously
played the role of mediator for the release of a number of Western hostages,
the most prominent of them being the hostages of a French company in Arlit,
Niger.
France entering the negotiations changed the way the
terrorist group dealt with the file. Once it made sure that the French were the
ones running the negotiations from behind a curtain and that Western hostages
were on the negotiating table, it raised its demands.
The mediation began at the initiative of a businessman of
Malian origin who has a special relationship with Cisse, as the government
wanted to release Cisse to achieve political gains in light of a fraught
electoral and political atmosphere. The intervention of businessmen led Malian
President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita to assign the file of the kidnapping to the
prime minister and tasked him with entering into negotiations with the
kidnappers, which meant searching for a reliable intermediary. At that time,
the Malian businessman close to Cisse contacted the Mauritanian businessman Moustapha
Ould Limam Chafi.
Sumptuous ceremony
Immediately after the return of the terrorist group’s
members, they held a lavish ceremony. Iyad Ag Ghali, the current leader of the
group, succeeded in achieving important political and material gains during
this deal. But having his group strengthened with 200 experienced fighters,
among them a number of prominent al-Qaeda leaders, was the biggest gain for him
and his group in the midst of a fierce war against ISIS.
The group requested an amount of €10 million from each party
(France, Mali and Italy) for a total of €30 million, in addition to the release
of 200 members of the group held in Malian prisons, after it had previously
asked for the release only 30. The parties agreed to the group’s demands,
granting the group its first ransom since its establishment five years ago,
which comes as it is fighting a fierce war against ISIS in a battle for
influence in central Mali.
Among those released were five al-Qaeda leaders who were
arrested by the French army on the border between Libya and Niger, in a region
that is cut off from the world and is frequented only by dangerous people. They
are accused of being involved in the attack on the Radisson Blu Hotel, which
was the most dangerous attack to have occurred in Bamako, the capital of Mali.
Also among the released was a leader named Ibrahim, known by
the nickname Fawaz, a Mauritanian who had previously participated in all the
major operations launched by al-Qaeda in the Sahel and West Africa, including
an armed operation in the Tevragh Zeina suburb in Nouakchott.
The Mauritanian terrorist also participated in planning an
attempted bombing in the city of Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire. He was arrested
accompanied by Egyptians, and now he left prison as part of the prisoner
exchange deal



