
Emerging Jihadist Threat on the Burkina Faso–Togo Frontier
In May 2025, Al-Qaeda’s Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimeen (JNIM) dramatically shifted the security landscape in the central Sahel by seizing two pivotal towns in Burkina Faso. First, in late March, jihadist fighters overran the garrison at Diapaga—just 25 kilometres from Togo’s eastern border—looting weapons, vehicles, and ammunition and establishing a forward operating base. Building on that success, on 11 May they launched a coordinated assault on Djibo, employing captured anti-aircraft guns to force the withdrawal of government air support and inflicting heavy casualties among Burkinabè forces. Simultaneous strikes on multiple additional towns demonstrated JNIM’s newly honed ability to conduct multi-front offensives and sustain control over key territory.
These developments place jihadist elements directly on Togo’s doorstep. Togolese border outposts in the Cinkassé and Dapaong prefectures now face the imminent risk of raids, kidnappings, and smuggling operations by well-armed militants operating from Diapaga and Djibo. Worse, both towns anchor the vital Lomé–Sahel corridor—the main overland artery linking the port of Lomé to Fada-N’Gourma, Ouagadougou, and onward into Niger and Mali. Any disruption or jihadist takeover of this route could sever essential trade flows, wipe out transit revenues for Togo, and drive-up import costs across the Sahel. On the humanitarian front, Burkina Faso’s internal displacement figures have already climbed into the millions; an influx of refugees into northern Togo threatens to overwhelm local services and worsen shortages of food, shelter, and healthcare.
Historically, Togo relied on Burkina Faso as a security buffer, trusting its neighbour’s military to keep jihadists at bay. That assumption has collapsed alongside the Burkinabè junta’s faltering defences. Africa Security Analysis warns that Togo must immediately diversify its defence partnerships—seeking bilateral and multilateral agreements with coastal neighbours, regional coalitions, and international allies—and simultaneously strengthen its own border units, rapid-reaction teams, and intelligence capabilities. Failure to act decisively risks turning northern Togo into the next jihadist staging ground.
Beyond Togo, JNIM’s territorial gains threaten a broader regional spillover. Neighbouring states such as Benin and Ghana could find themselves confronting similar incursions, destabilizing the entire Gulf of Guinea coast. Economically, sustained attacks on the Lomé corridor could slash cross-border commerce by up to 40 percent and undermine livelihoods across the Sahel. Politically, persistent insecurity and disrupted trade routes may erode public confidence in governments and spark social unrest.
This alert from Africa Security Analysis underscores that only a proactive, multifaceted response—combining regional cooperation, fortified domestic defences, and alternative logistical strategies—can prevent a cascading crisis and safeguard stability throughout West Africa.
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Benin is entering a more difficult security and economic phase. The March attacks in Alibori and Atacora confirm that JNIM remains capable of striking Beninese military positions, seizing equipment, and operating across border areas linked to Niger, Burkina Faso, and Nigeria.
Mali: Humanitarian Flight Suspension and Expanding Extremist Pressure Signal a Deteriorating National Security Environment
Mali’s security environment is no longer defined by isolated insurgent pressure in the north and centre. The pattern now points to a wider national threat picture: JNIM continues to shape conditions in central and northern Mali while pushing deeper into the south and west; ISSP remains active in Gao and Ménaka; northern armed groups retain the ability to challenge Malian military positions; and humanitarian access is increasingly vulnerable to state-imposed restrictions as well as armed-group pressure.
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