Mali: Which way forward? A chat with Bruce Hall, Baz Lecocq, Gregory
Mann and Bruce Whitehouse



May 14, 2013










Domestic politics meets foreign intervention - what future for the Malian state?

 A little over a year ago, a few friends met to hang out online and
talk about the political crisis in Mali (the text was published here
and entitled ‘Mali: How Bad Can it Get?’). We thought of this as a
virtual grin, with much debate over who was the dogoni who would make
the tea.

It was a blistering hot day in Bamako and the power was out in his
neighborhood, so Bruce Whitehouse joined us online from a cybercafe.
Isaie Dougnon was in Florida. A year later, when we decided to reprise
our conversation, Isaie had returned to Bamako and Bruce to the U.S.,
and some of the ECOWAS intervention forces had established their
headquarters around the corner from where Bruce had been sitting. A
lot had changed, but some things stay the same: power cuts prevented
Isaie from joining us for the chat. And we still have not agreed on
who will make the tea.

This chat was held on-line on 26 April 2013.

Bruce Hall (BH) lectures African history at Duke University, Baz
Lecocq (BL) lectures African history at Gent University, Gregory Mann
(GM) lectures African history at Columbia University and Bruce
Whitehouse (BW) is a a member of the Anthropology Department at Lehigh
University.

***

Military-civilian relations

GM: What leaps out from the chat from last year for you, Bruce
Whitehouse, since you were there then and are here now?

BW: A year ago, I notice, we were expecting the fallout from an
imminent clash between “the international community” and the junta,
which would either see Sanogo remain in power or exit the scene.
Instead what we got was some kind of “third way,” and that
confrontation remains unresolved (even if it no longer looms as large
as it did back then).

GM: Is Sanogo still relevant?

BW: He proved his relevance in December when he forced Prime Minister
Cheikh Modibo Diarra to resign.

GM: And post-intervention?

BW: I notice he still gets a lot of airplay on state television.

GM: That’s for sure.

BH: Do Sanogo and his allies have the de facto role of reorganizing
the Malian army going forward?

BW: Bruce, that’s his official mandate. But many say Sanogo was set up
to fail in his new job, that it was a canny move by Dioncounda, et al.
to marginalize him.

BL: The BBC wrote that the now sanctioned UN mission is there to
protect the July elections. They probably meant “against Sanogo.”

GM: Just to tweak the response to Bruce Hall—Sanogo has the de jure
mission of reorganizing the army—with perhaps a built-in fail by
Dioncounda Traore as Bruce Whitehouse said—but the EU has the de facto
mission, for different motives.

GM: The striking thing is that the EU training mission is not allowed
to have contact with Sanogo and his committee, so the army re-training
mission as a priority for outside ‘partners’ and Sanogo’s appointment
by Traore to retool that army are on parallel tracks—not touching—and
maybe going in opposite directions…

BH: Do we know in any detail how well the Malian army has performed in
the North since the intervention? Despite some reports here and there
about civilian disappearances, they seem to have behaved in a more
professional manner than one might have expected.

BL: They have indeed behaved, but it depends on which units. Some
‘green berets’ misbehaved but not to the extent that people feared,
although fear among nomads is still high.  Red berets and Gamou’s men
work OK. Most ‘southerners’ remain based in big cities. In fact,
Gamou’s men have not ‘misbehaved’ against civilians, but they have
taken the opportunity to ‘tweak’ some local economic and political
balances.

Elections and the political scene

GM: Can anyone foresee these July elections going forward? Or NOT
going forward? Either is an equally valid question.

GM: How long can this hazy special status for Kidal be maintained?
Through elections (which the MNLA does not want to see)? Through the
end of the year… or through the decade?

BL: How long I don’t know, but until after the completion of the [E.U.
military] training mission at least. The excuse [for it] so far is
that Malian soldiers risk behaving badly due to a lack of training,
command structure, etc.

GM: I have thought one of the key questions around elections was
whether or not they would be legitimate if they can’t be held in the
North due to general insecurity or due to specific political
opposition in the region and town of Kidal in particular.

BL: They can be held in the North, even in Kidal. Maybe not en brousse
in Kidal or Gao or Timbuktu to a large extent, but the cities should
be no problem in terms of organization.

GM: If France and the US and the UN want elections to be held in
Kidal, they will be, but the political scenario will be complex.

BW: A Malian I know was just suggesting today that Malian voters
boycott any election that doesn’t extend to Kidal, to signal their
desire for the region to remain a part of Mali. Coming back to
elections, officials in Paris, Washington and Bamako keep insisting on
the July date. But I wonder whether anyone really believes these
statements—the French may be simply trying for an ‘effet d’annonce’,
like when you give a home repair contractor a deadline to finish the
job even when you know he’s not going to make it, you just want to
speed the process along. And I notice that the Malian government only
announced the winning bid for electoral material (notably voter ID
cards) in April, with an eight-month deadline! If my arithmetic
serves, that’s about five and a half months too many to be ready for
July.

GM: What Bruce Whitehouse says is right, but on the other hand, the
campaigns are gearing up… each party knowing that the best organized
is most likely to prevail (that is, not the most popular, but the
richest and best organized).

BL: The big problem with July elections organization-wise en brousse
is the rainy season. Sometimes elections have been organized in July
for exactly that reason: to make brousse votes difficult. This was a
complaint among nomads in the North against the election system in the
first place. So this will make it less likely that elections in the
North will be viewed as legitimate among the nomads.

But only among nomads, because the majority of voters are sedentary in
the cities and riverine villages. Right?

BW: Right Baz – even under the best of circumstances, July is a
terrible time for elections in Mali. This year the rains will be
compounded by Ramadan (which begins around July 9th I believe). Add to
that lingering insecurity, and logistical problems, and I predict a
postponement until at least November or December. Any election held
before then would be severely undermined by all the above factors.

GM: Again, the “legitimacy” of elections has never been believed in,
in the “North” or “South” and it does seem to be one of those things
that is a countrywide problem…

Captain Sanogo and Elections

BH: But does it matter? Is the goal not to dislodge Sanogo and friends?

BW: To do that, it will take a meaningful election with
higher-than-usual voter turnout.

BL: I can’t believe international players like France or US think
voting will lead Sanogo to retreat or be out of influence and
effective power. If they think Sanogo will be gone after elections
they are too naïve.

GM: Baz, believe it! They think that guy is done. I think Sanogo and
the junta are quite marginalized already, although the arrest of
newspaper editor Bakary Daou proved they still have some capacity to
defend explicitly corporate and personal interests.

BL: So Greg, you too think that, given AHS being marginalized, a good
and well-organized vote (not in July) might make him exit the scene?

GM: I think his marginalization is not an effect of potential
elections, but perhaps a permissive factor in them. But I think Sanogo
has become unpopular in Mali due to the large privileges he accrued,
the transparency of his self-interest, and his failure to actually
lead army (or nation). We are a long way from April 2012, and he is
also systematically marginalized by outside players who now have much
more weight than they did in April 2012.

BL: True.

GM: Any predictions about what overall turnout would look like? Higher
than in past? Bruce Whitehouse, any sign for optimism there?

BL: No higher turnout than in the past if elections are held in July
for reasons Bruce Whitehouse gave.

GM: If the electoral roll was considered more or less OK by people
generally, would they turn out to vote? I know that’s a big ‘if.’

BW: There’s some reason for hope: surveys like Afrobarometer continue
to show that Malians prefer elections to any other means of choosing
their leaders. They just want better choices and an electoral system
that isn’t weighted in favor of the “usual suspects” (parties that
were associated with ATT’s rule). Plus, given that turnout in Mali has
never reached even 40%, all it would take is a 50% turnout to send a
strong signal that Malians support democratic institutions, not juntas
or other extra-legal alternatives.

GM: Very good point, Bruce. Any thoughts on who would be favored?

BW: I asked this question to a panel of Malian journalists in Paris a
couple of weeks ago, and their responses were all over the map. It’s
hard to identify a clear favorite at this point, but perhaps IBK
(Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta) is the “establishment candidate” with the
“least worst” reputation among ordinary Malians (at least in the
south).

GM: There was an interesting internet poll, which is probably not
worth much, that showed Sako, IBK, Soumaïla Cissé in the lead. The
same article says IBK is considered France’s candidate—that might be
true. He might also be the US’ candidate. He also has a strong
organization nationally and smart alliances.

BW: Ironic since he was seen as the Islamist’s man in 2002 according
to the US and others!

GM: I hear Sako from the inside but never from the outside.

BW: What about Modibo Sidibe? He’s got quite a campaign machine and
presumably a big war chest, but is he too tarnished from being ATT’s
Prime Minister?

GM: Well, Modibo Sidibe is I think unacceptable to many—too tarnished
and the US and others don’t like his history of mega-corruption (see
the history of the Global Fund). And, more recently, he was heckled
and pelted with projectiles when he tried to raise campaign funds in
Paris.

BW: I’ve rarely met a Malian with a kind word to say about Modibo Sidibe.

Elections or a national dialogue?

BH: So there is no serious question around these elections or the
future after them of addressing what has happened in the country over
the last two years? Addressing the clear alienation in the North, not
just among Tuareg nationalists, but more generally in terms of the
collapse of the Malian state? It seems to me that [we are looking at]
the same political players, and the same rhetoric of democracy and
secularism, etc.?

BW: Responding to Bruce’s question: A couple of months ago, Tiebile
Drame proposed a wide-ranging national conference-type discussion as a
way to lead into elections, but I’m not hearing much support for that
idea these days. If elections are held this year, perhaps they will
open up an opportunity for such a discussion to take place.

GM: Tiebile has a good argument, I think, but from the outside there
seems to be no appetite for such a discussion, whether because of
external institutional interests or for fear of results…

BL: Might the ‘Truth and Justice’ procedure that’s slowly starting
also address these questions, instead of only focusing on ‘the North’?

GM: The ‘Truth and Justice’ procedure is capacious but also cumbersome
and will be slow. It’s too early to condemn it, but there is not much
reason for optimism either.

GM: The ‘Truth and Justice’ procedure is meant to be countrywide and
to address the more systemic problems of the Malian state, beyond
Kidal and Bamako, as would a national conference, if people took part.

GM: BW, would a national conference permit, rather than preclude, such
a discussion? No “elected” president would call such a conference!

BW: The only way an elected government would organize such a
conference would be if it were elected with the mandate to do so.

GM: Sorry, that seems bit circular, but OK. Wouldn’t the internal
pressures of a party (with its competition for posts, etc.), give
every incentive to close down rather than open up further discussion?
Which winning candidate would put his own mandate in question in such
a conversation? I tend to think of elections and a conference as
either/or options.

BL: But a ‘Truth and Justice’ procedure would not have that
disadvantage as they are organized to focus on the past, where a
National conference is focused on the present. So further
delegitimization of previous governments might even make present
one—whoever it is—look better.

The Malian State

BH: We tend to think of this as a problem between Bamako and Kidal,
between Tuareg nationalists and southern Malian elites, but what seems
much more problematic and profoundly problematic for the future is the
fact that the health service collapsed and was abandoned, that the
state completely delegitimized itself and had its infrastructure
destroyed in 2012. That doesn’t get put back together easily and it
does not recapture the populations of that region, even those who are
pro-Mali in Northern terms.

GM: Bruce Hall, very true.

BW: Whatever government gets put in place next, if it can make some
progress getting schools and health infrastructure working again
nation-wide, that would go a long way to restoring Malians’ confidence
in their state.

BL: Not all of the physical health infrastructure got destroyed. [It
is perhaps not possible to] further deligitimize the state in the
North [because for many] it held no legitimacy in the first place.
That is a major issue indeed in the North, as well as in the South… Is
the state (so not politicians, but the state) now less legitimate then
it was before? Are people in the South en brousse linking legalized
land grabbing to the rottenness of the situation elsewhere?

BW: Baz, I think the Malian state took a huge blow in 2011-2012, not
only from the coup and rebellion, but the erosion of the rule of law
to which you refer. I can’t speak for rural residents, but urbanites
were really exasperated by the way the elites under ATT had hijacked
the whole state apparatus, from the ministries and the courts on down.

Secularism, Political Islam and Justice

BH: Let me pose a slightly different question: Has the collapse of the
state in the North and the relatively successful administration by the
Islamists done anything to strengthen the kinds of Salafi voices who
have long been critical of the civil servants and agents of the state?

GM: Another great question. I have been asking myself, does the actual
lived experience of ‘sharia’ strengthen or weaken broader political
support for it? There are two distinct but related questions—vis à vis
service delivery and vis à vis ‘justice’ or law-and-order, which Bruce
Whitehouse has written about.

BH: I mean in places like Timbuktu and presumably elsewhere, not just
in the North, there is a long experience with government civil
servants coming and behaving badly. This is the state that many people
experience. The Islamists were different, and I always thought that I
detected a fair amount of sympathy for what they were doing among
people who stayed in the North, even if they were critical of some of
the things they did.

GM: Bruce Hall, yes this is a good point. The mujahideen, or whatever
you want to call them, provided free electricity in Timbuktu.
Diouncounda Traore and Django Cissoko aren’t providing it in Bamako
now.

BW: A secular state must be seen as capable of delivering JUSTICE, not
only services. And that’s perhaps been the biggest failure of the
Malian state so far.

BL: Those people I spoke to were mostly critical of their projects.

BL: The one good thing they seemed to have been able to do was to have
food supplies organized sufficiently to avoid total disaster, and they
did so by abolishing taxes and bribes etc., and leaving markets open
and better situated for international Sahel grain merchants who
delivered at lower prices. But all the gendered stuff (women veiling
their faces, etc.) and the destruction of ‘teghere‘ (western-style
education) and the separation of boys and girls in school, as well as
of course huddud… in Kidal it was not welcomed much. But electricity
yes, and other infrastructure, they kept it running to some extent.

GM: Re justice, yes—efficacious and rapid justice. All states struggle
greatly with this and it is one of the strengths of other systems.

BH: Justice is not what the Malian state has ever delivered. This idea
of a secular state is very particular to a group of Malians who
constitute the state, and are the product of the French-language
educational system. But I don’t think this is representative of
Malians as a whole, especially the rather large number of Malians
educated in the Arabic schools.

GM: BH, yes agreed. And I’ve been thinking that is one of the things
that would emerge from a true national dialogue would be a questioning
of secularism and its failures or incapacities (especially vis à vis
justice). That is one reason why outsiders might not be too hot on
such a dialogue or convention… Also, that dynamic was in my view
changed by the French intervention. That is to say, the possibility of
a real critique of secularism may have been partly foreclosed by the
new disposition.

BH: I think that the point is not that the Islamists’ administration
was welcomed as a model for the future, or that everything that they
did was well received. But it did provide an alternative experience
and it has a constituency still in many places, including in southern
Mali. How does this change the national political conversation?

BW: My reading (from afar) over the last several months has been that
the Islamists’ political project has suffered a major setback in
Bamako, where ‘Wahhabi’/reformist Muslims have had to distance
themselves from the Salafists and from armed Jihadists. The more
moderate-looking Sufi Muslims have come out strengthened since the
French intervention.

BL: The kind of justice the mujahideen gave was ‘petty justice’:
catching a thief here and there… forcing food prices down by
abolishing taxes will perhaps also be seen as justice but otherwise,
what justice did they render? Shouldn’t we make a distinction between
Malians thinking about ‘justice’ and about ‘just’ as in ‘just
government and just society’?

GM: I think a form of conflict resolution (family and business
disputes, civil law) that is quick, efficient, grounded in shared
beliefs/texts, and not on bribes, personal connections, etc., is
inherently favored. The question is can a secular state provide that,
and can it convince people that it can?

BL: Yes, but less so if it starts flogging people for practicing
marriage customs differently than prescribed. Some of the sharia-type
justice given goes against local visions of sharia interpretation. The
strict Salafi view on fiqh is not the view on fiqh that all local
ulama hold, or all local people.

GM: Indeed.

BL: So the beliefs/ texts are not all shared.

GM: Let’s say grounded discursively in a shared episteme. While there
is a gigantic spectrum within that, arguments grounded in Islam are
now much closer to being hegemonic than those grounded in the Malian
state, constitution, law books and institutions, and secularism.

BH: What I would suggest – and it is really only a question – is that
the secular model of Malian statism has failed. Many people were
unhappy with it long before 2012, but it has been proved to be a house
of cards now. As problematic as the jihadi-Islamist experience in the
North was for so many people, it also opened up a discursive space for
a more explicitly Islamist politics in framing how the state works and
what it does. We will see if that makes any difference but I think
that we might think about northern Nigeria as a reference, because
Islamist state governments are not so far away.

GM: I think Bruce Hall and I are agreeing.

GM: Bruce Whitehouse thoughts on this?

BL: Bruce Hall: then there’s also Mali’s western neighbor Mauritania
as a model of how to integrate ‘Islam’ into the state, perhaps even
more acceptable for people in the North (not saying anything about
those in the South) as it is closer to local visions of Islam prior to
the introduction of Salafi thought. So it provides good grounds for a
compromise between the two (Salafi and local visions of integration of
state and Islamic praxis)?

BW: I agree, Greg. As for Bruce’s suggestion, as I’ve spoken to
various audiences since January about the situation in Mali, people
have frequently pointed out that the same weaknesses I highlighted
with respect to the Malian state also apply to states throughout the
region. It’s hard for me to verify this since my specialization is
pretty narrowly on Mali these days; I don’t have a cross-national lens
to look through. But I wonder whether Mali’s crisis might be a sign of
things to come elsewhere in Africa.

Outside Actors

GM: Can we turn to the intervention question? Last year, there was
great resentment of ECOWAS—Bruce Whitehouse in particular pointed this
out. We were in a moment of deep nationalist paranoia (as Roland
Marchal called it, maybe a bit dismissively)–has that changed since
January?

BL: In Kidal, France is trusted, I don’t know about the Chadians.

BW: France is certainly trusted a LOT more than a year ago—I sometimes
wonder whether this would be true if Sarkozy had been re-elected. But
the UN has a pretty poor reputation at least according to a recent
Friedrich Ebert Foundation poll in Bamako.

GM: Yes, I was struck by that poll result regarding the UN. Any ideas
on why that is?

BW: Not really. Greg, I heard you say recently that the only people
who wanted the French to pull out of Mali are the French. What do you
see happening as they draw their forces in Mali down?

GM: Whew, great question. My fear—worst case scenario—is targeted
violence against civilians in cities and villages of the Niger Bend by
‘non-state actors’ to impede ‘stability’ and elections…

GM: The French are very used to the idea of having their soldiers
stationed in West Africa for the long term. It will be hard now for
Mali to reject that possibility.

GM: Important to remember that they have not actually met their
objectives, although they might like to claim otherwise.

BL: Greg, can you expand on ‘not met objectives’ a bit? The main
objective of national integrity has been reached.

GM: Has it? Who controls Kidal?

BL: Hasn’t the main objective of AQMI being pushed out of
power—although not out of country maybe—been reached?

GM: But have any hostage been freed? Is AQMI no longer a threat?

BL: Indeed, no hostages have been freed and AQMI is still a threat,
but do you think the Malian stated controlled Kidal before AQMI did?

GM: Before, say, 2011, the Malian state at least had some claim to
power in Kidal region, through proxies, modus vivendi with various
armed groups (including possibly AQMI, etc.)…

BL: … and that’s what they’ll get back again, perhaps less of it
though, because a number of their proxies are out of power locally.

Intercommunal Tensions in the North

The intercommunal violence committed by all sides in the civil war
that occurred in Northern Mali during the first half of the 1990s is a
shadow that has hung over our expectations for what the current
conflict in Northern Mali might bring. The Ifoghas Tuareg of the
region of Kidal were at the heart of a rebellion against the Malian
state in the early 1960s, in the 1990s, and again in 2012. But they
were ultimately unable to maintain a united front and rebel groups and
factions splintered along lineage and social status lines. There are
other long-standing tensions in the North along racial and ethnic
lines that might create new and very unwelcome possibilities of
violence.

GM: Another important theme is possibility of intercommunal
violence—Bruce Hall in particular pointing this out in last year’s
chat—Baz, does that seem to you still a strong possibility?

GM: Let me put my question another way. In the 1990s, you had a
scenario, as Baz has analyzed, of a formal ‘peace’ before the war.
That is the ‘91 and ‘92 agreements preceded serious intercommunal
violence of 1994. Could we be looking at that kind of ‘peace before
war’ scenario again? Baz? Bruce Hall?

BL: I’m not able to say that re. Tuareg / Songhay things (Bruce Hall?)
but one conflict that might get out of hand is between Tuareg and Arab
communities and especially inter Arab (Bruce Hall, thoughts?) that had
been rising in the last decade anyway.

BL: BH: I think 2012 has given Arab communities a lot of bones of
contention to fight about on top of the ones they already had.

BL: Inter Tuareg: not so much. Iyad seems really out of the way at
least and Alghabbas has lost much credit joining Ansar Dine among at
least non-Ifoghas. With Gamou back in the fold of the Malian armed
forces he might be able to run a tighter ship and keep inter Tuareg
fighting from flaring up

BL: But on Ganda Koy / Ganda Izo…? Bruce Hall?

BH: I think it remains a possibility. In the region around Timbuktu
for example, there is quite a bit of pent up anger among Songhay that
is directed at local Tuareg and Arabs. The local Arab Barabish in
Timbuktu have huge problems among themselves now given what has
happened over the last two years, and the role of some Barabich with
AQIM. But in the end, the intercommunal violence of the 1990s was
orchestrated by the army – at least it was started that way. The
danger it seems to me remains a very weak army allying with and arming
civilian militias who are much more inclined today to act on their
eliminationist discourse about the nomads being fundamentally
untamable, than in the past.

GM: Wait, Baz, that’s really interesting—Gamou suppressing
inter-Tuareg disputes? Could you expand?

BL: Some bids the Ifoghas tribe might still have had for supremacy in
the Kidal area are gone due to the political blunders of the new
‘acting chief’, while the real power holder is gone out of sight and
many will not be happy with his recent actions either. This leaves the
Ifoghas weaker, and therefore Gamou’s aims to protect and even expand
Imghad and other interests.

BL: Also around Menaka MNLA positions have not made them popular
either so this may lead to a return to the ‘older’ order of the
Ouillimiden coming back a bit, and they are very bent on peace through
Malian state.

BL: But on inter Arab violence, you’re right about Berabish internal
problems, but I foresee that the Lamhar-Kounta struggle has become
more pronounced over their division between MUJWA and Ansar Dine last
year and the scraps they had over positions in the area around Al
Khalil and the larger Timtarine and Tilemsi.

BL: Responding to Bruce Hall again, I agree that Ganda Koy ‘94 was
basically army run, and so is Ganda Koy / Izo now too…

BL: I think this might be a further reason that the French army and
AFISMA does not want the Malian army in Kidal and perhaps not very
many places elsewhere either. What is the Malian army and what is
Ganda Koy right now? Who can see the difference? Maybe exactions
[reprisals?] by the Malian army were committed by soldiers who were
members of the Ganda Koy or Ganda Izo?

BW: I believe Dioncounda announced some weeks ago that all militia
members (Ganda Koy and Izo) had been integrated into the army.

BL: Well… that’s NOT good news! Especially not when it comes to the
trust nomad populations will have in the Malian Army.

BH: Well so far, these Songhay militias have not been much of
anything, mostly because the army was out of the North. Now that the
army is back, we will have to wait and see. But a potential
Songhay/nomad problem is not so much of a threat for Kidal, but in the
Niger Valley.

BL: Yes Bruce, I think in the Niger valley it’s going to be difficult,
and many forget that that’s where most Tuareg live… They will be the
last to come back home from refugee camps, I believe.

BL: ma’a salam ya ikhwan

BW: Good night Baz. Good day Bruce!

More analysis of Mali can be read here

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"South Sudan Info - The Kob" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.


Reply via email to