Algeria mobilizes neighbors against terrorism in Africa through regional approach and diplomatic action
Algerian diplomacy is moving at a
rapid pace to mobilize support against the growing threat of terrorism in
Africa, as Algeria recently acknowledged that the escalation of terrorist
operations in a number of Sahel countries has become “a matter of concern and a
threat to the collective security of Africa and international peace and
security.”
In recent days, Algeria used its
diplomatic weight, beginning on its own soil, and then moving to Niger and then
Congo-Brazzaville, and before that Mauritania, where Algerian Foreign Minister
Ramtane Lamamra flew to “warn and mobilize” African support to prevent the
escalation of terrorism.
From local to
regional
Algeria seeks to expand its approach
to the war on terrorism from a local to a regional one, and it is also counting
on embracing the African Center for the Study and Research on Terrorism (CAERT)
and the African Union Mechanism for Police Cooperation (AFRIPOL), and within
the framework of its mandate as the African Union coordinator in the fight
against terrorism.
In light of the expansion of
terrorist attacks in Africa, the parallel Algerian diplomatic movement recently
began with intensive meetings between Lamamra and AU Commissioner for Political
Affairs, Peace and Security Bankole Adeoye in the Algerian capital.
The meetings discussed in depth the
latest security and political situation on the continent and reviewed the most
important issues on the agenda of the African Union, according to a statement
by the Algerian Foreign Ministry. The recent dynamism of Algerian diplomacy
towards the African continent was clear in goals and milestones, which
President Abdelmadjid Tebboune confirmed in a message to the AU president
regarding “the growing phenomenon of terrorism on the African continent.”
This was revealed by Niger’s foreign
minister, who said that President Tebboune “officially wrote to the President
of the African Union to share with him his view regarding Algeria’s vision of
what we consider in our country as the growing phenomenon of terrorism, with
the number of its victims unfortunately rising in our neighborhood and across
many regions of the African continent.”
Strengthening
mechanisms
Tebboune called for the need to
strengthen the mechanisms adopted by the African Union in the fight against
terrorism “more than ever before to develop cooperation and combat the
phenomenon of terrorism.”
In Niamey and Nouakchott, Lamamra
discussed with Nigerien and Mauritanian officials “the challenges posed by the
situation in the Sahel-Saharan region as a result of the expansion and severity
of terrorist acts and ways to confront them through activating the frameworks
and mechanisms created for this purpose under the umbrella of the African
Union.”
Meanwhile, in Congo-Brazzaville and
the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Lamamra carried a “concrete Algerian
vision for the treatment of the growing phenomenon of terrorism in the African
continent.”
Lamamra handed a message from
Tebboune to the presidents of these two African countries, which included
“concrete proposals” to combat terrorism in the Sahel and Sahara region,
according to what the Algerian Foreign Ministry confirmed.
Tebboune's
message
According to the statement,
Tebboune's message “falls within the framework of Algeria's exercise of its
mandate as a coordinator to combat terrorism and violent extremism in Africa.”
The Foreign Ministry revealed the
content of Algeria's proposals, which it said “are related to the exacerbation
of the terrorist threat in Africa, especially in the Sahel and Sahara region.”
According to the statement, the
president’s message also included “concrete proposals that will stimulate the
work of institutions and strengthen the mechanisms established by the African
Union in the context of combating this phenomenon.”
The Sahel region has turned into a
hotbed of a massive spread of terrorist organizations, such as al-Qaeda, ISIS
and Boko Haram, which have moved from local organizations to transnational
organizations.