Sahel Edition

Sahel: Cocaine trafficking surges in the Sahel, as armed groups seek to profit from illicit trade

Posted On 27 June 2023

Number of times this article was read : 1182

Annual cocaine seizures in the Sahel surged from 13 kilograms (28 pounds) in 2020 to 863 kilos just two years later as armed groups sought to profit from the illicit trade, the United Nations’ drug agency said in its 2023 report. The largest seizures of the drug in the region last year were in Burkina Faso (488 kilos), Niger (213 kilos) and Mali (160 kilos), the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) said on Monday.

The tally is “probably only the tip of the iceberg of far larger undetected trafficking flows across the region,” it warned. Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger, among the poorest countries in the world, have been struggling for years to contain armed insurgency groups, including jihadists linked to Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State in the Greater Sahara (ISGS).

Working alongside traditional trafficking networks, the groups charge “taxes” in exchange for safe passage through the areas they control, the UNODC said. In Mali, some armed groups are getting involved in transporting cocaine and cannabis resin to finance their activities, it said. Cannabis herb is the ” most seized drug” in the Sahel region, with a record 36 tonnes seized in 2021, with the largest quantities in Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger, the report said.

West and Central Africa have long been key transit hubs in the global cocaine trade, with local drug consumption increasing in recent years, the UNODC said. Between 2019 and 2022, at least 57 tonnes of cocaine were seized in or en route to West Africa.

AFP
Other Articles in this Week's IssueMigrations: EU on overdrive to get deal with Tunisia to prevent migrations >>

More on the Sahel

West Africa: ECOWAS in turmoil

West Africa: ECOWAS in turmoil

West Africa’s economic grouping, ECOWAS, faces a new crisis as former chairman and Guinea-Bissau President Umaro Sissoco Embalo refuses to step down despite his mandate ending on February 27, 2025.  Embalo, who once criticized Sahelian coup leaders on behalf of ECOWAS, now defies the organization, even expelling its mediation delegation.

Brief: Fifteen Migrants Found Dead in a Boat off the Coast of Nouadhibou, Mauritania

Mauritanian authorities discovered a boat near Nouadhibou carrying 39 migrants, including nine deceased and ten in critical condition. Survivors, primarily from Senegal and Mali, reported that fifteen migrants died from exhaustion, though not all bodies were found. The deceased were buried by local authorities. Mauritania has become a key transit point for African migrants attempting to reach Europe via the Canary Islands.

The North Africa Journal's WhatsApp Group
.
Shield and Alert Sahel

Pin It on Pinterest

The Sahel Channel
The Maghreb Channel
The Egypt Channel
The North Africa Journal
The Sahel Channel
The Maghreb Channel
The Egypt Channel
West Africa: ECOWAS in turmoil
Sahel: Terror Groups Gain Ground as Armies Struggle to Contain Them
Mali: The Failing Campaign of Wagner in Mali Presages Trouble for the Junta in Bamako
The North Africa Journal's WhatsApp Group
.
Shield and Alert Sahel
Share This