Coups and Terror in the Sahel

Terrorist Groups’ Exploitation of State Fragility and Ungoverned Spaces in Burkina Faso and Niger

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.59569/jceeas.2024.4.2.288

Keywords:

Coups, instability, juntas, state fragility, Sahel, terrorism

Abstract

This study investigates the intricate relationship between coups, state fragility, and terrorism in the Sahel region, with a focus on Burkina Faso and Niger. The research contextualizes recent coup attempts and successful seizures of power in West and Central Africa since 2020 within the broader historical landscape of coups on the continent. Coups are increasingly linked to rising state fragility, which fuels the proliferation of terrorist activities, exacerbating instability throughout the Sahel, (Dahiru, 2024; ‘Conflict Watchlist 2023: The Sahel’, no date). Methodologically, this study adopts a multi-faceted approach, combining qualitative analysis of historical data with quantitative assessments of coup occurrences and terrorist incidents. It relies on diverse sources, including the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project (ACLED) and scholarly research, to discern patterns and dynamics over time. Theoretically, the study explores how the emergence of military juntas and the erosion of state stability precipitate the spread of terrorism in the region.. The paper will show the extent to which terrorist violence has ravaged local economies, displaced populations and disrupted service provision. The study also aims to explain the implications of increased terrorism for regional security, governance, and potential radicalization and recruitment trends in addition to informing policies and interventions aimed at mitigating the complex interplay of coups, state fragility, and terrorism in the Sahel.

Author Biography

Antonetta Lovejoy Hamandishe , Oxford Brookes University: Oxford, Oxfordshire, GB

Antonetta Lovejoy Hamandishe is a highly accomplished individual dedicated to promoting democracy, gender equality, and women's empowerment, particularly in Africa.  She is a Ph.D. candidate in Peace Governance and Development with University for PEACE reading on the gender dimensions of women's political participation post-conflict, exemplifying her commitment to both academic rigor and practical application.  She received an MA in International Relations from the Department of Social Science at Oxford Brookes University (2019); an MA in Human Rights, Peace and Development from Africa University (20170, a Certificate in Project Monitoring and Evaluation from the University of Zimbabwe (2015) and a BA (Hons) in History and Development Studies from Midlands State University (2008). Her research and fieldwork experience overlap arenas of democracy, gender, elections and the inter-disciplines of peace and global political economy.

 She is a feminist activist, and her scholarly works focus more on women’s political participation, electoral gender quotas and legal frameworks, election dispute resolution and conflict monitoring in East, West and Southern Africa. She has provided advisory and technical support to the electoral units and observer missions of the following intergovernmental bodies with EISA: the African Union, ECOWAS, SADC, EAC and ECF-SADC in Lesotho (2015,2022), Ghana (2016), Malawi (2014), Angola (2022) and Kenya (2017, 2022). She observed and reported on electoral processes in Guyana (2015) and Myanmar (2015) with The Cater Centre and in Uganda (2016) and in Zimbabwe (2013, 2018) Egypt (2015), Mozambique (2014,2018) and Liberia (2023) with the Electoral Institute for Sustainable Democracy in Africa (EISA).  She also served as an Election Expert for the EISA in Liberia, Somalia, and Zimbabwe, playing pivotal roles in assessing electoral systems' inclusiveness and representativeness. She is currently the EISA County Representative for Liberia.

References

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Published

2024-12-11

How to Cite

Ziso, E., & Hamandishe , A. L. (2024). Coups and Terror in the Sahel: Terrorist Groups’ Exploitation of State Fragility and Ungoverned Spaces in Burkina Faso and Niger. Journal of Central and Eastern European African Studies, 4(2), 27–49. https://doi.org/10.59569/jceeas.2024.4.2.288