When
Location
Topic
28 apr. 2025 10:14
Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Benin, Togo, Ivory Coast
Counter-Terrorism, Al-Qaeda, Islamic State
Stamp

Escalating Jihadist Violence and Political Fragmentation in the Sahel

A Week of Crisis

In the last week of April 2025, the Sahel region experienced a significant escalation in violence and instability, primarily driven by jihadist groups and ongoing political fragmentation. Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM), an al-Qaeda-affiliated group, launched coordinated attacks across Mali, Burkina Faso, and Benin from April 21–25, targeting civilians, security forces, and urban centres. These attacks reflect JNIM’s growing operational reach, exploiting vulnerabilities in urban outskirts and capital cities like Bamako and Niamey. Islamic State Sahel Province (IS-Sahel) also intensified its activities, with a notable attack near Tillaberi, Niger, on April 25, killing at least seven Nigerien soldiers. Another IS-Sahel assault near Tongo Tongo left a military patrol missing after heavy fighting.

The security situation is compounded by the region’s political disunity, particularly following the formal withdrawal of Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger from the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) on January 29, 2025, to focus on their Alliance of Sahel States (AES). This shift has weakened regional counterterrorism coordination, leaving a vacuum that jihadist groups exploit. The AES’s alignment with Russia, including military ties and the presence of Russian forces in Niger, has further complicated international responses. Burkina Faso’s military junta faces accusations of human rights abuses, including a reported massacre of 223 civilians, including 56 children, in February 2025, highlighting the brutal counterinsurgency tactics employed by state forces and allied militias like the Volunteers for the Defense of the Homeland (VDP).

The humanitarian crisis worsened, with nearly 5 million people displaced across the region, including 2.1 million in Burkina Faso alone. Climate change, resource scarcity, and weak governance continue to fuel recruitment by extremist groups, particularly in rural areas. Coastal states like Benin and Togo reported increased JNIM activity, with 28 Beninese soldiers killed in early January 2025, signalling the spread of violence beyond the central Sahel. Despite regional efforts to establish a counterterrorism force, the lack of coordinated international support and the withdrawal of Western forces have left local militaries overstretched, allowing jihadist groups to expand their influence and target urban centres with increasing sophistication, including drone warfare.

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Benin, Burkina Faso, Niger, Nigeria, Ivory Coast 11 maj 2026 10:17

Benin: Northern Attacks, Fuel Pressure, and Regional Security Cooperation Define the Incoming Government’s Stability Challenge

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 11 maj 2026 10:13

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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