The Reference’s 7th birthday: Terrorist organizations in Africa’s Sahel and Sahara, ISIS and al-Qaeda struggle for influence, and monitoring spread of Brotherhood in Africa
The African continent was not far
from the terrorist waves that swept the world in recent decades. North Africa
has suffered for many decades of terrorism, especially in Egypt, Algeria,
Tunisia and elsewhere. As readers know, these terrorist waves have receded in
North Africa for several reasons, including the defeat of the Brotherhood in
Egypt, as well as its loss of elections in Algeria and Mauritania, although it
retained a foothold in Tunisia or Morocco. But the waves of terrorist
operations have been almost non-existent in recent times, just as Sudan
accelerated getting rid of everything that related to the Brotherhood after the
overthrow of Omar al-Bashir’s government, except that the group is still active
in a number of African countries, such as Senegal, Niger, Nigeria, Mali,
Somalia and Chad. Meanwhile, other terrorist networks extend from Africa’s
western coast to the eastern coast, where terrorist organizations have spread
in Somalia and the Horn of Africa, which were the first areas to witness
foreign interventions and international counterterrorism activity on the
African continent.
This file contained a number of
topics, on top of which are terrorism in the Sahel and Sahara, the alliance of
various parties, ISIS and al-Qaeda struggling for influence, rebel groups and
the Brotherhood, Iran’s plan to swallow Africa, the map of the spread and
distribution of the Brotherhood in Africa, and international coordination to
prevent terrorist groups from taking control of Sahel countries.
The file mentioned the varying size
of economic losses as a result of terrorism in different regions. The economic
losses of terrorism in Africa over the past decade were estimated at $171.7
billion, which is a non-exhaustive estimate of the costs of commercial
investment and lost tourism, losses of informal economic activity, and
additional security spending that included combating terrorism and refugees or
internally displaced persons.
In 2019, global economic losses
amounted to $16.4 billion, a decrease of about 25% from 2018. At the level of
Africa, it amounted to $13 billion, a nine-fold increase since 2007, and an
increase in the African share of the global total from 3.1% in 2007 to 49.2%.
In addition, sub-Saharan Africa,
South Asia, the Middle East and North Africa incurred 86% of the economic
losses resulting from terrorist operations recorded in 2019, of which
sub-Saharan Africa accounted for $12.5 billion.
Nigeria saw the largest drop in
economic losses in the region by about 9%, while Burkina Faso and Mali saw
significant increases by 552% and 31%, respectively.
This is in line with what the Sahel
region has witnessed in the increase in the spread of terrorist activities over
the past five years. The number of deaths decreased in Nigeria, while it
increased in other countries, including the countries of the Sahel.
On the other hand, the focus countries,
the countries of deployment and the countries at risk were responsible for the
majority of economic losses resulting from terrorist operations in Africa, and
this corresponds to the different levels of terrorist activity in the 18
countries compared to the rest of Africa.
The total economic losses for
refugees and internally displaced persons between 2007 and 2019 amounted to
$451 billion in all 18 African countries focused in this report.
This value included production,
consumption and investment losses in the country of origin and the annual
expenditure of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, in addition
to the fact that refugees and internally displaced persons in Nigeria and Sudan
incurred the largest economic losses of $14.7 billion and $12.9 billion,
respectively.
On February 10, 2018, Al-Bawabah
published its cover with the Quranic verse {Fight them, God will punish them by
your hands} [al-Tawbah: 14] with a picture of the heroes of the Egyptian
Thunderbolt Forces during the operations to cleanse Sinai of terrorists, with
“Heroes purify Sinai” written next to it. The cover also included an appeal to
the armed forces, “O you who want to fight me, set a date for yourself and dig
yourself a grave.” Here was the vision of Al-Bawabah to support the armed
forces in the war against terrorism.