Displaced by the desert: an expanding Sahara leaves broken families and violence in its wake

Displaced by the desert: an expanding Sahara leaves broken families and violence in its wake

Malian girls stand in the shade in Kidal, northern Mali.

(UN Photo/Marco Dormino)

Abdoulaye Maïga proudly displays an album showing photos of him and his family during happier times when they all lived together in their home in northern Mali. Today, these memories seem distant and painful.

“We lived happily as a big family before the war and ate and drank as much as we could by growing crops and raising livestock,” he says. “Then the war broke out and our lives changed forever, pushing us southwards, finally settling in the region of Mopti. Then we went back home in 2013 when the situation stabilised,” Abdoulaye explains.

In 2012, various groups of Tuareg rebels grouped together to form and administer a new northern state called Azawad. The civil strife that resulted drove many from their homes, with communities often fleeing with their livestock, only to compete for scarce natural resources in vulnerable host communities, according to the United Nations.

After the security situation began to improve in 2013, many returned home to rebuild their lives and livelihoods. But soon it was the turn of the expanding Sahara Desert, drought and land degradation that became the next driver of their displacement.

“As time went by, the land became useless and we found ourselves having no more land to work on. Nothing would come out that could feed us, and our livestock kept dying due the lack of water and grass to eat,” Abdoulaye recalls.

“Drought across the Sahel region, followed by conflict in northern Mali, caused a major slump in the country’s agricultural production, reducing household assets and leaving many of Mali’s poor even more vulnerable,” says the FAO.

“We used to move up and down with our livestock, looking for water and grass, but most of the times we found none. Life was unliveable. The Sahara is coming down, very fast,” Abdoulaye says emotionally.

In the end, the Maïga family had to leave their home and broke up; Abdoulaye and his brother Ousmane heading to Benin’s commercial capital Cotonou in 2015, after a brief stint in Burkina Faso, as the rest of their family headed for Mali’s capital, Bamako.

Creeping desertification

The UN says nearly 98 per cent of Mali is threatened with creeping desertification, as a result of nature and human activity. Besides, the Sahara Desert keeps expanding southward at a rate of 48 kilometres a year, further degrading the land and eradicating the already scarce livelihoods of populations, according to the Reuters news agency.

The Sahara, an area of 3.5 million square miles, is the largest ‘hot’ desert in the world and home to some 70 species of mammals, 90 species of resident birds and 100 species of reptiles. And it is expanding: its size is registered at 10 per cent larger than a century ago, LiveScience has reported.

The Sahel, the area between the Sahara in the north and the Sudanian Savanna in the south, is the region where temperatures are rising faster than anywhere else on Earth.

The cost of land degradation is currently estimated at about US$490 billion per year, much higher than the cost of action to prevent it, according to studies by the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) on the economics of land desertification, land degradation and drought.

Roughly 40 per cent of the world’s degraded land is found in areas with the highest incidence of poverty and directly impacts the health and livelihoods of an estimated 1.5 billion people, according to the UN.

In a country where six million tonnes of wood are used per year, reports say Malians are mercilessly smashing their already-fragile landscape, bringing down 4,000 square kilometres of tree cover each year in search for timber and fuel.

The lack of rain has been making matters worse, especially for the cotton industry, of which the country remains the continent ’s largest producer, with 750,000 tonnes produced in the 2018 to 2019 agriculture season. Environmentalists believe Mali’s average rainfall has dropped by 30 per cent since 1998 with droughts becoming longer and more frequent.

Conflict over resources

Chatham House Africa consultant Paul Melly says that desertification reduces the scope for agriculture and pastoralism to remain viable. “And of course, that may lead a few disenchanted members of the population, particularly young men, to be attracted by alternative livelihood options, including the money that can be offered by trafficking gangs or terrorist groups,” he says.

Ousmane, Abdoulaye’s brother, echoes Melly’s sentiments: “The temptation is too much when you live in desertification-hit areas because you don’t get enough food to eat or water to drink. That’s where the bad guys start showing up on your door[step] to tell you that if you join them, you will get plenty food, water and pocket money. The solution is to run away, as far as you can to avoid falling into that trap.”

Consequently, Ousmane and Abdoulaye sold the few remaining animals the family had so they could leave the country.

In Burkina Faso they hoped to find work in farming. However, they were not always welcomed. “We could feel the resentment from locals, so I told my brother we should leave before it gets ugly because there were already some tensions between local communities over what appeared to be land resources,” Ousmane says.

Chatham House’s Melly confirms this: “There is no doubt that the overall context, of increasing pressure on fragile and sometimes degrading natural resources, is a contributory factor to the overall pressures in the region and, thus, potentially, to tension.”

Like elsewhere on the continent, severe environmental degradation appears to be amongst the root causes of inter-ethnic conflicts.

Using the Darfur region as a case study, the Worldwatch Institute says: “To a considerable extent, the conflict is the result of a slow-onset disaster – creeping desertification and severe droughts that have led to food insecurity and sporadic famine, as well as growing competition for land and water.”

What is being done?

Projects such as the UN Convention to Combat Desertification’s Land Degradation Neutrality project aimed at preventing and/or reversing land degradation are some of the interventions to stop the growing desert.

Another large initiative that aims to wrestle back the land swallowed by the Sahara is the Great Green Wall (GGW), an US$8 billion project launched by the African Union with the blessing of the UNCCD, and the backing of organisations such as the World Bank, the European Union and the FAO. Since its launch in 2007, major progress has been made in restoring the fertility of Sahelian lands. Nearly 120 communities in Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger have been involved in a green belt project that has resulted in the restoration more than 2,500 hectares of degraded and drylands, according to the UNCCD. While more than two million seeds and seedings have also been planted from 50 native species of trees.

But there remain gaps and many in Mali still remain affected. Community leader Hassan Badarou spent several years teaching Islam in rural Mali and Niger. He describes the situation in Mali as very complex: “It is not easy to live in these areas. People there face double threats. It is double stress to flee from both armed conflict and desertification. And such people need to be welcomed and assisted, and not be seen as a threat to local livelihoods.

“That is why we used to preach tolerance and solidarity wherever we went, to avoid a situation whereby local communities would feel that their meagre resources are under threat from newcomers. There should be a dialogue, an honest and frank dialogue when communities take on each other over land and water resources,” he advises.

Against the expanding Sahara, all are equal. Fadimata, an internally displaced person from northern Mali, says that climate change is affecting everyone in the Sahel, including terrorists. “I saw with my own eyes how a group of heavily-armed young men came to a village, looking for food. They said they wanted to do no harm but wanted something to eat.

“Of course, we were very scared, but the villagers ended up putting something together for these poor young men. They sat down, ate, drank plenty of water and left afterwards. I think it is better that way than to kill villagers and steal their food, livestock and water.”

This article was originally published by IPS News.