Algeria:
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AQIM denied that two of its members, Abu al Abbas Uthman and Abu Nu’man, surrendered to Algerian authorities through a statement issued on June 7. The group alleged that the two were captured and the reports were created by Algerian authorities to deceive the public.[i]
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The Algerian security forces released a list of 108 names of suspected terrorists in the Sahara and Sahel regions, which included 21 Algerians accused of belonging to the Sahara Emirate. On the list were also thirty-four Mauritanians, five Moroccans, three Tunisians, six Libyans, fourteen Nigerians, seven Chadians, and twenty-one Malians. There are also reports of suspects from Egypt, Senegal, Benin, and Burkina Faso.[ii]
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Security services in Algeria seized weapons and ammunitions in Algiers when arrested a man who confessed to an affiliation with AQIM. He allegedly had orders to aid in transporting ten Tunisian elements to the group’s stronghold and give them identification documents.[iii]
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Algeria’s armed forces, the People’s National Army, undertook an ambush killing five terrorists and arresting two others in the outskirts of Tizi-Ouzou on the night of June 9. The citizens of the area had informed the security forces about the movements of the terrorists in the village of Thula Tighrist. The National People’s Army then began a large sweep of the surrounding area to find those who had escaped during the ambush.[iv]
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Terrorists in an explosive-packed truck bombed a checkpoint in Lakhdaria in the Bouira province of Algeria killing two police officers and two civilians, including a Chinese worker, and injuring 20 others on June 10. The same night, Algerian security forces in Bouira killed two militants and arrested another.[v]
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Security forces revealed the identity of the terrorists who orchestrated the attacks on the paramilitary police barracks in the Timizar region east of Algiers on June 10. Youcef Maldji was suspected of involvement with abductions and recruitments and put bombs in a retired soldier’s car. Maldji was sentenced to death. Another identified terrorist is Hakim Bournane.[vi]
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The criminal court convicted D. Mohammad for his relation to a terrorist group. The court also convicted another, Touhami, with the sentence of 20 years. The accused revealed the identities of other terrorist elements and denied being arrested for connection to a clash with security forces. Others convicted in this case faced between five and 20 years in prison and escaped the death penalty.[vii]
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Algerian security forces dismantled a sleeper cell active in Oran on June 12. The terrorist group allegedly colluded with the mafia and gangs to smuggle arms and drugs from Morocco.[viii]
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The Algerian government appointed Republican Guard Commander General Abdelghani Hamel as national security chief on June 16. This post has been vacant since the assassination of Colonel Ali Tounsi on February 25.[ix]
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The French Secretary General and a diplomatic advisor visited Algeria in a second trip to enhance relations between France and Algeria on June 20. The Secretary General stated that, after he left the meeting, he was optimistic that the relationship was on the road to normalization and there was a mutual desire to improve it.[x]
Mauritania:
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Spanish Foreign Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos reportedly asked Mauritanian President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz to consider releasing an Islamist prisoner in an effort to release the two Spaniards Alberto Vilalta and Roque Pascual held by AQIM on June 6. The prisoner in question is Mauritanian Taghi Ould Youssef who is held at Lahsar prison and was involved in violent acts against the Mauritanian police.[xi]
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Mauritania refuses to free Taghi Ould Youssef in exchange for Spaniards kidnapped by AQIM. This refusal comes as a shock despite the Mauritanian president’s insistence that he would not allow the release during the meeting with the Spanish Foreign Minister on June 6.[xii]
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Mauritanian Defense Minister Hamadi Ould Baba Ould Hamadia refused to release Al Qaeda prisoners in exchange for Western hostages because it would pose a threat to Mauritanian security he said in an interview on June 9. According to the Defense Minister, ransom payments and release of prisoners only perpetuates terrorism. Currently, about 70 Islamists are being held in Nouakchott central prison.[xiii]
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Mauritanian officials have prevented a prison escape attempt by suspected Al Qaeda members according to security sources on June 10. The prisoners were digging a tunnel that had already passed under one or two of the walls when guards discovered them.[xiv]
Morocco:
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A supporter of the Jihadist movement reported to AQIM about the AFRICOM-sponsored military exercises in Morocco with American forces known as “African Lion 2010”. He told AQIM to “attack, attack” the joint forces.[xv]
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The Spanish and Moroccan navies are conducting joint naval exercises called “MAES” in the Gulf of Cadiz. The goal is to improve joint training and naval procedures revolving around safety and security. The exercises have begun in the port of Rota and will end in the port of Casablanca.[xvi]
Dealings in Niger:
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Niger President General Salou Djibo visited Libyan leader Mu’ammar al Qadhafi on June 13. Djibo met with the leader to discuss the situation involving the 40 Niger prisoners sentenced to death in Libya.[xvii]
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Libya has decided to drop the death sentences on the 22 Niger nationals. Libya will transfer more than half of the prisoners back to Niger to serve their sentences.[xviii]
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The National Observatory of Communications in Niger has allowed the main private radio station of northern Niger, Sahara FM to broadcast again after a two-year hiatus. The leader of the Tuareg rebellion, Rhissa Ag Boula, had owned the station before it was bought in 2004. This permission to broadcast is an effort on behalf of the junta to reestablish democracy in Niger after the government took harsh measures to limit freedom of speech during the rebellion.[xix]
Stabilization Efforts in Nigeria:
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The Nigerian government is training approximately 20,000 ex-militants in order to “reorient” and “reintegrate” them into society. Under this program, the former rebels will be given finances to build their own businesses. The first group of former militants will have completed the program by the week of June 20. Since this amnesty program has started, lowered conflict in the Niger Delta has led to an increased oil output of about two million additional barrels per day.[xx]
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Abuja’s police chief reported that more than 300 suspected kidnappers have been arrested since President Jonathan demanded action against abductions in February. All of those arrested are members of the Igbo ethnic group from southeastern Nigeria.[xxi]
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The Rivers State Command of the Nigeria Civil Security Corp reported that it arrested several people for vandalizing oil pipelines and that the Corp is creating new means of preventing these occurrences.[xxii]
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Belarus and Nigeria signed a military cooperation accord on June 17. According to State Defense Industry Committee spokesman Uladzimir Lawranyuk, the accord provides a legal basis for development of cooperation in the military and technical spheres.[xxiii]
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A group of Saudi investors pledged $300 million in agriculture, housing, and infrastructure in Katsina State during a visit over the weekend of June 19-20. The leader of the delegation Salim Lalani said that the group will eventually spread its contributions and projects to other regions of the country.[xxiv]
Instability in Nigeria:
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The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta claimed that four government soldiers were killed and an unspecified number were wounded in clashes during the night of June 9. The group said that the clashes began when its militants came upon two military gunboats in Delta State. It reports that none of its fighters were wounded. The Joint Task Force denies the claim regarding the deaths of any soldiers.[xxv]
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The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta demanded a ransom of $1.5 million for the release of two Russian sailors they abducted in Cameroon in May. The captives are Captain Boris Tersintsev and Chief Engineer Officer Igor Shumik.[xxvi]
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Nigeria’s foreign reserves have shrunk from $39 billion to $37.5 billion since the end of May. This is due to the Central Bank of Nigeria’s attempts to maintain the stability of the naira. The country’s naira currency has recently declined to 154 naira to the dollar.[xxvii]
Transnational:
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Security forces in northern Africa seized a video from a defector of a group affiliated with AQIM. The video was recorded in the Sahara desert near Sudan. There are no threats against the West and it depicts members reading the Quran, listening to the radio, and taking pictures for identification cards. The authorities believe that the men are mostly from Algeria, Morocco, and Mauritania.[xxviii]