France turns page on ISIS in African Sahel by killing Sahrawi
France has turned a new page from
the black book of ISIS by killing its leader in the Greater Sahara, Adnan Abu
Walid al-Sahrawi, who was responsible for most of the attacks in the border
triangle between Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso, on the night of Wednesday,
September 15. French President Emmanuel Macron considered the killing of
Sahrawi another great success in France's war against terrorist groups in the
Sahel region.
Macron tweeted, “The nation thinks
this evening of all its heroes who died for France in the Sahel region in the
Serval and Barkhane operations, and of the grieving families and all the
wounded... Their sacrifice was not in vain... With our African, European and
American partners, we will continue this fight.”
Terrorist with
baccalaureate
Abu Walid al-Sahrawi, who first
appeared in 2011, obtained his baccalaureate degree and studied social sciences
at Mentouri University in Constantine, Algeria, where he graduated in 1997.
He was born in the city of Laayoune,
one of the most important disputed cities in Western Sahara. He belongs to the
Raqibat tribe to a wealthy merchant family who fled the city to refugee camps
in Algeria.
Sahrawi was an activist in the
separatist Polisario Front and was an official in the Youth Union of Saguia
El-Hamra and the Oued Ed-Dahab, which is close to Polisario. His name began to
be widely circulated about ten years ago after he became one of the leaders of
the Movement for Unity and Jihad in West Africa, one of the groups linked to
al-Qaeda, which controlled northern Mali at the time.
From northern Mali, he led terrorist
movements, specifically after the Tuareg rebellion, as the country entered into
a security crisis and the atmosphere became fertile for terrorist movements.
With his gunmen, Sahrawi enforced
Sharia law for about a year, making headscarves compulsory for women, enforcing
the cutting off of thieves’ hands, and banning music, sports, alcohol and
tobacco.
Allegiance to
ISIS
In May 2015, the Al-Mourabitoun
organization published an audio recording of Sahrawi in which he said, “The
Al-Mourabitoun group announces its allegiance to the Commander of the Faithful
and the Caliph of the Muslims, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, for the necessity of the
group and the rejection of division and difference.” But his former companion
Mokhtar Belmokhtar announced that the Al-Mourabitoun remained loyal to its former affiliation with
al-Qaeda, before the Al-Mourabitoun broadcast earlier an audio speech of the
Egyptian terrorist Hisham Ashmawi, who was executed by the competent
authorities in Egypt in terrorism cases in March 2020, describing Sahrawi as
the “Amir of Al-Mourabitoun.”
Although Sahrawi declared allegiance
to ISIS in 2015, ISIS did not announce the acceptance of the pledge of
allegiance by the Sahrawi fighters and did not recognize their affiliation with
it at that time.
After several months passed and the
successive defeats of ISIS, which inflicted heavy losses on the terrorist
organization, Baghdadi, who was killed in October 2019, recognized Sahrawi as
the new ISIS wolf in Africa and praised him, according to several reports of
research institutions monitoring terrorist groups, including US Military
Academy at West Point and the International Center for Countering Extremism,
due to the terrorist attacks the group launched on a gendarmerie station in
Burkina Faso in late 2016.
Terrorist
operations
During his appearance in the Sahara,
Sahrawi established what is known as the Movement for Unity and Jihad in West
Africa, which kidnapped three European citizens in the Sahel region, but at
that time he did not announce his affiliation to any party or organization.
On March 3, 2012, the Sahrawi group
carried out a car bomb attack in the city of Tamanrasset in southern Algeria,
injuring 23 people, in addition to declaring the execution of Algerian diplomat
Tahar Touati after he was kidnapped from his country's consulate in Gao, one of
the largest cities in northern Mali.
After these operations, Sahrawi
disappeared for several months, before reappearing again and declaring that he
was affiliated with al-Qaeda and follows the path of its current leader, Ayman
al-Zawahiri.
About a year later, Sahrawi and
Belmokhtar announced the establishment of the Al-Mourabitoun in the Sahel,
Sahara and Libya.
Under the leadership of Sahrawi,
ISIS, which is spread along the border between Mali and Niger, carried out a
series of terrorist attacks. The most effective operation took place on October
4, 2017, targeting a joint patrol between the United States and Niger in the
Tongo Tongo region in Niger and near the Malian border, which resulted in the
killing of four American soldiers and four Nigerian soldiers.
The terrorist operations carried out
by Sahrawi under the umbrella of ISIS prompted him to be classified in May 2018
as a global terrorist.
In October 2019, the US State
Department offered a reward of up to $5 million for information on Sahrawi
after he was blacklisted.
For years, Sahrawi retained the
right to collect zakat, sometimes raising the slogan “threat and execution.”