UN Highlights About Dangers of Growing IS Entrenchment in West Africa

Fri Feb 16 2024
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UNITED NATIONS, United States: Senior UN officials Thursday highlighted what they called deteriorating security conditions in West Africa linked to the growing entrenchment of the Islamic State jihadist group and its affiliates.

Despite progress in combatting the group, it “continues to pose a serious threat to international peace and security,” particularly in the “most affected” regions of West Africa and the Sahel, UN under secretary-general for counterterrorism, Vladimir Voronkov, told the Security Council.

“The situation in this region has deteriorated in (the past six months) and is becoming increasingly more complex, with local ethnic and regional disputes conflating with the agenda and operations of these groups,” he stated.

“Daesh affiliates continued to operate with increasingly more autonomy from the Daesh core,” he said, using the Arabic acronym for IS.

“Should this trend of greater autonomy persist, the report alerts to the risk that a vast area of instability may emerge from Mali to the borders of Nigeria,” said Voronkov, referring to a new report from UN SG Antonio Guterres out this week.

The report noted “internal divisions” within IS — as indicated by last August’s delayed announcement of the death of leader Abu al-Hussein al-Husseini al-Qurashi — and the possibility of “a shift in the center of gravity of the Daesh core away from Iraq and the Syrian Arab Republic.”

“Africa and Afghanistan were mentioned as viable locations” for successor Abu Hafs al-Hashimi al-Qurashi — “with the former reportedly being more likely,” the report read.

“Daesh and its affiliates are becoming more ingrained in parts of the African continent. They are exploiting the political instability and expanding their radius of influence, their operations and territorial control in the Sahel with growing concerns for coastal West Africa,” said executive director of the Counter-Terrorism Committee Executive Directorate, Natalia Gherman.

“The African continent now accounts for almost half of terrorist acts worldwide, with central Sahel accounting for about 25 percent of such attacks,” she added.

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