Al-Qaeda plays chord of tribal conflict in Ghana
Al-Qaeda is taking advantage of the tribal conflict in Ghana
in West Africa to establish a foothold and expand its spread, as it is
exploiting the dispute between the Kusasi and Mamprusi ethnic groups, which has
been going on for many years and has left a large
number of deaths and injuries in the Bawku region in the north of the
country.
Local conflicts a breeding ground for terrorism
Local and regional conflicts are exploited by terrorist
elements in their favor by recruiting young people as a
result of poverty and ignorance.
In this context, Ghanaian Defense Minister Dominic Netiol
said that the local ethnic conflict between the Mamprusi and the Kusasi in the
northern city of Bawku increases the terrorist threat, explaining that the
government will send five hundred additional soldiers to Bawku to support the
forces there in an attempt to maintain peace and
security.
Over the past year, terrorist elements affiliated with
al-Qaeda launched about 1,470 attacks in Burkina Faso and northern Ghana, an
increase of 26% compared to 2021, and those attacks resulted in 3,600 deaths.
Experts estimate that the local branch of al-Qaeda, known as
Jamaat Nusrat al-Islam wa al-Muslimin (JNIM), has control over 40% of the
territory of Burkina Faso and its neighboring countries such as Togo, Benin and
Ivory Coast.
The United States fears that Ghana will become a destination
for terrorist elements affiliated with al-Qaeda, especially since the majority of the country's 34
million people are Christians, while Muslims constitute a large percentage
in the north of the country. There are also fears that al-Qaeda will control
the revenues of the cocoa and gold trade and Atlantic ports, which would
provide the organization with important material and strategic returns, as well
as informal gold mines, which are abundant in northern Ghana.
Rearranging ranks
Dr. Nourhan Sharara, a researcher on African affairs, said
that al-Qaeda is trying to rearrange its ranks in an attempt to re-establish
itself after several losses in previous years, as is the habit of terrorist
groups in exploiting internal and regional conflicts to enter the targeted
areas.
In a special statement to the Reference, Sharara added that
the ethnic conflict between the Mamprusi and Kusasi tribes in the northern city
of Bawku created a fertile environment enabling al-Qaeda to recruit many young
people.
She stressed that the second fear facing the Ghanaian
authorities, and indeed the entire continent, is terrorist groups gaining
control over the revenues of the cocoa and gold trade and the Atlantic ports,
which provides the organization with important material and strategic returns,
making Ghana a destination and incubator for extremists and terrorists.
Sharara noted that it must be taken into account that most
of the population of Ghana, Christians and Muslims, are concentrated in the
north only, and this could feed the presence of al-Qaeda, so the Ghanaian
authorities must intensify efforts to resolve the internal armed tribal
conflict, as well as cooperation with neighboring countries that are besieged
by al-Qaeda, ISIS and other armed terrorist groups.