2013/02/07

Devon DB: The Crisis in Mali. A Historical Perspective on the Tuareg People!

Currently the ongoing situation in Mali is gaining traction in the media with the reporting of Al Qaeda members within the ranks of the Tuareg rebels. The situation is quite complicated, and involves not only France, but also the US, and partially Canada, and links to the interests of these Western powers with not just Mali, but with the African continent as a whole. However, in order to get a better handle on the situation, there must first be an understanding of the domestic actors, namely the Tuareg people. The Tuareg are a people that have lived in northern Mali, as early as the fifth century BCE, according to Herodotus. After establishing the city of Timbuktu in the 11th century BCE, according to Herodotus. After establishing the city of Timbuktu in the 11th century, the Tuareg traded, traveled, and conquered throughout Saharan over the next four centuries, eventually converting to to Islam in the 14th century, which allowed them to gain great wealth, trading salt, gold, and black slaves. This independence was swept away when the French colonized Mali, when they defeated the Tuareg at Timbuktu, and established borders and administrative districts to rule the area until Mali declared independence in 1960. The Tuareg people have consistently wanted self independence, and in pursuit of such goals, have engaged in a number of rebellions. The first was in 1916 when, in response to the French not giving the Tuareg their own autonomous zone, called Azawad as was promised, they revolted. The French violently quelled the revolt, and subsequently confiscated important grazing lands, while using Tuaregs as forced conscripts and labor, and fragmented Tuareg societies through the drawing of arbitrary boundaries between Soudan (Mali) and its neighbors. Yet, this did not end the Tuareg goal of an independent, sovereign state. Once the French had ceded Mali independence, the Tuareg began to push toward their dream of establishing Azawad once again with several prominent Tuareg leaders lobbying for a separate Tuareg homeland, consisting of northern Mali, and parts of modern day Algeria, Niger, Mauritania. "However, black politicians like Modibo Keita, Malis first President, made it clear that independent Mali would not cede its northern territories.   

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