GUINEA-MALI: Authorities move to prevent border clashes
Source: IRIN
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BAMAKO, 3 December 2007 (IRIN) - After months of pleas to authorities from village leaders, the Malian and Guinean governments say they will take
steps to prevent further violence over land rights along their border, where three clashes in less than six months have killed 11 people and injured at least 30 others. After late November meetings,
authorities from both countries announced the resumption of a long-inactive mixed patrol force along the Mali-Guinea border. "We have agreed
to provide border security forces from both
countries with adequate forms of communication, in order to encourage and expand the exchange of information to better secure the border areas," said Malian Minister of Territorial Administration,
General Kafougouna Koné. In early November, Guinean villagers armed with hunting rifles and machetes reportedly burned homes, stole cattle, killed six Malians and injured 20
others. Similar clashes over land rights took place in July, in May and in 2006, all between villagers in the Mandiana prefecture of Guinea and Mali's Yanfofila prefecture. Too little, too late? Following an August meeting between interior ministers of both countries, regional governors travelled along the border trying to convince villagers to resort to peaceful means of negotiation when
disputes arose. Authorities also promised to revive the patrol force, but according to local leaders, military along the border did not even have ammunition. Ever since the July attacks, those local
leaders had been demanding that authorities provide their villages more protection but they say their demands fell on deaf ears. After the killing of an elder in the Malian village of
Siradiouba in May, village leader Demba Seydou Sidibé travelled to the capital Bamako to try to convince authorities of the need for a military base in his village. "I spent two weeks in Bamako
without being able to meet either of the ministers responsible," he said. Days after his return, the latest set of clashes erupted clashes he said could have been avoided. "It's time the
government stop this laxity, which consists of plugging leaking holes, [but not fixing the problem]. Instead of concrete measures that could have at the least consisted of deploying a
contingent of soldiers at the border, our authorities launched themselves into diplomacy with no benefit for the people of Siradiouba." Other measures Following a meeting of ministers on 23
November, additional measures were announced. "We have agreed to pursue before the courts in both countries those responsible for the crimes and offences committed along the border, to restore
stolen goods on one side and the other, to the continue the education mission along the border by prefects of Yanfolila and Mandiana, in collaboration with locally elected officials," Minister
Koné said. Separate meetings between the countries' prime ministers resulted in commitments to hold regular meetings of border authorities from the national to the local level, as well as a
forum gathering border authorities in the first trimester of 2008. They also promised to involve women and traditional communicators in all the steps of the resolution of the matter. Koné said
the organisation of patrols along the border has already begun. Still, village leader Sidibé has his doubts. "If nothing is done, the conflicts along the Mali-Guinea border could be the object
of armed conflicts between the two countries sooner or later." sd/ha/np© IRIN. All rights reserved. More humanitarian news and analysis: http://www.IRINnews.org






