Mauritania Slavery: The torment of Selama and Maimouna

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During a press conference on Sunday 11 March 2012 at FONADH, the SOS Slaves human rights non-government organization denounced the ordeal of sisters Selama Mint Mbarek and Maimouna Mint Mbarek, former slaves in the rural Western basin of Mauritania. The two girls escaped from their master across the Sahara desert in the dead of night taking only a little water with them for the journey. With the help of a Tuareg nomad, they headed first toward Bassikounou and after two days, travelling at night to avoid detection and the risk of being forcibly returned, eventually reached Néma.

At the age most girls are concerned with passing their school diploma, 14 year old Selama Mint Mbarek is already the mother of a son, born to her after being raped while serving as a farm hand for her former owner. Her younger sister, just 10 years old, has never experienced the inncocence of childhood, and was regularly beaten by her master. It was after one of these corporal punishments that the two little girls fled. Even so, Selama had to convince her sister that running away was worth the risk. Despite the perils of the journey ahead, Selama brought her child with her. According to the heartbreaking testimonies they delivered to the press, their master is still holding their aunt, brothers and cousins under his yoke.

This is the video interview with Selama and Boubacar Ould Messaoud, founding member of the SOS Slaves NGO, by Mauritanian news agency Alakhbar during a visit to the capital, Nouakchott, shortly after their escape.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4uuW8cxYNPQ]

The girls were just 7 and 3 years old when their parents died. The deaths created a double burden for Selama, who became full-time slave to her master and surrogate parent to her baby sister at that tender age.  Soon they were presented to a new owner, who set them to work in the desert, Selama tending a herd of camels and Maiouma a flock of sheep. It was while tending the herd that Selama was raped. She reported it to her owners but they saw no reason to take any action. The level of deprivation experienced by these two little girls is shocking. On the pretext of “building their stamina and endurance” the owner left them in the extremes of temperature without adequate protections, and denied both of them food or water for up to 2 days at a time for any “misdeeds” such as being unable to find a stray lamb. They were not allowed to sit with the family for rest or meals, and were given only the most basic clothing just once every two years. Selama relates the tawdry details of these conditions in a world-weary tone; she has known no other life. In between, she attends to her son with a competence one can only admire.

Mauritania Slave Girls Flee, Rescued By Tuareg, SOS Slaves

The aunt, M’Barka Mint Salka, and her children Souélick and M’Bareck were rented by their master, Oulad Sidi of the Laglal tribe, to the Ehel Bourrada tribe in Dhar. After intervention by the regional representative of SOS Slaves, the Wali (governor) and local prosecutor ordered the genradmerie to investigate.

The case was investigated by a judge, and brought to the Prime Minister, Moulaye Ould Mohamed Laghdaf. They were awarded 5,000 UM (about US$17) from the Program to Eradicate Sequels of Slavery. This small amount is intended to cover their needs. SOS Slaves however notes in its statement that the ruling does not include actions to find and free brothers Lagdav and Hamid, or aunt M’Barka Mint Salka and her children. Neither does it seek to prosecute their former owner, despite slavery being outlawed several times in Mauritania, being against the constitution and having being “criminalized” in an amendment* to the constitution just last month.

The human rights NGO raised concern for slavery cases involving minors and expressed its discontent to see this case filed without action, especially regarding the attitude of the defence. SOS Slaves is disappointed that the justice system appears unwilling to pursue a conviction, as happened with the Moulemine Mint Boubacar Vall case, which was exonerated by the Supreme Court in January 2011. SOS Slaves issued a warning that the struggle against slavery must continue and urges the authorities to perform their duty regarding slavery victims.

*It should be noted that the constitution was amended by a special session of both houses of government in Mauritania but that those bodies were acting outside of their legal mandate, which expired in November 2011. Therefore, the new amendment to criminalise slavery may not stand up to legal scrutiny.

Based on an earlier March 2012 post, and a report by Awa Seydou

Desert rebels MNLA fight for free Azawad

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UPDATED:

3 Feb 2012 – Feedback is in. That “MIG-21″ in Mali is actually a truck. The MNLA does have Tuareg members but to claim their actions are an Azawad uprising does not account for the hundreds of Azawad people fleeing the area where the MNLA have been engaging Malian troops.

There is a bunch of complicated politics wrapped around this situation, involving Mali, Mauritania, Algeria, Niger, Tunisia, Morocco, Libya, and Senegal – not only because MNLA claimed the latter sent tanks to Mali two days ago. Also Europe and the US are taking a big interest, and Nigeria was recently invited to a regional security meeting as an observer.

The recent violent clashes in Northern Mali were swiftly followed by the arrival of of dozens of US troops in the North of Mauritania, near the border with Western Sahara. The US contingent are assumed to be working alongside French armed forces which established a “training operation” in that location some time ago..

The US troops have been allowed to enter the country without a mandate from the Mauritanian parliament, which leads me to speculate that the recent role-swap between the Interior Minister and the Secretary General of the Defence Ministry might be related to new joint security initiatives that were the subject of discussions of recent months.

Western Sahara remains more or less isolated from the above discussions. A regrettable situation that will inevitably make a complicated situation even more difficult to resolve..

Mali and the MNLA have reportedly agreed to talks in Algeria. That Algeria announced it had temporarily withdrawn military support for Mali ahead of these talks may indicate that is is a condition of its role in the parley that it at least show a semblance of neutrality. More difficult to explain are Mauritanian Foreign Minister’s remarks that indicate his support for the Turaeg rebels, which some have taken to mean military and financial help for the MNLA. The FM also denied any link between events in Mali and AQIM, in contradiction of reports from elsewhere, including Mali. Of course, “AQIM!” is the new “Wolf!” – many countries seem to think (and not without good reason) that it will bring EU and especially US agencies running towards them, checkbooks a-flutter, ready to dole out wads of cash. It does seem that the Tuareg rebels and/or MNLA have a connection with AQIM, since they claimed to have enacted at least one kidnapping where the hostages ended up in AQIM hands..

The awkward fact remains that there are thousands of citizens of Mali and other countries in Africa, including Mauritania, who fought for Gadaffi against the Libyan opposition and NATO. Life is not easy for these returnees, and as long as they are believed to be in possession of large quantities of arms brought back with them from Libya, and treated like terrorists, it is going to be increasingly difficult..

Add the above to the drought and resulting famine; the increasing tide of refugees; and the ongoing civil unrest. We can say for sure that Africa will be making headlines for months to come.

5 Feb 2012Numbers.. there were already 4500 Tuareg #refugees in Mauritania before 3000 (or more) new arrivals from Mali. That’s what this blog tw: http://snup.us/qDb says [in Dutch, by Mamatal Ag Dahmane – spokesperson of ARVRA (Association of Victims Refugies et de la Repression de l’Azawad) in Europe]. I found it by following a link from a German woman.. quite the international scenario we have brewing here. Worse, there is a distinct racist tinge in some of the reports I’ve seen, claiming that people are being victimised for their “light skin” and claiming that people are afraid of being “mistaken for Tuareg”. A very nasty and highly suspect situation indeed.

5 Feb 2012 – A new post by @AbbasBraham points out Mauritania’s Aziz may not have a reason for supporting the Mali rebels. He might just be batshit crazy.

By all accounts, Aziz is an uneducated but vain, unscrupulous, and greedy man, who has already shown such contempt for the conditions of the people of Mauritania that increasing their burdens, even to the point of death from terrorist attack or famine, is not going to cause him any sleepless nights.

His other character flaws include cronyism and corruption in both moral and financial dealings.

Whatever the reason for his apparent support for the rebels in Mali, it will be to his advantage at the very least financially, and possibly in other ways that will feed his ego. Certainly it is being done with the knowledge of the US military, otherwise why would they have been allowed to deploy in Mauritania?

This might be a good time to remember the close bond between Aziz and his saviour Colonel Gaddafi, especially as far as achieving recognition from the African Union was concerned


DESERT rebels have launched a revolutionary war in the Sahara. [26 Jan 2012]

Video: 1 October 2011 – Azawad Protest


The fight for a free Azawad has turned into an armed conflict after brutal attacks on the population by the US-backed state of Mali.

On January 17 armed resistance fighters attacked military compounds in Menaka, Adaramboukare and Tessalit in the north of the African country.

Fighting continued for some time and there was a serious clash at Aguelhok.

Behind the insurrection was the Azawad National Liberation Movement (Mouvement National De Liberation de l’Azawad – MNLA), a group formed on October 16 last year.

The Mali state flooded the area with tanks, aircraft and troops and more fighting broke out on the morning of Thursday January 26.

The MNLA says the Malian army suffered heavy losses and was forced to retreat.

Photos published on Facebook show the wreckage of a burnt-out MIG-21 jet shot down by the resistance fighters. 

Mossa Ag Attaher, spokesman for the MNLA, told French newspaperLe Monde that the aim of the struggle was to liberate Azawad from Malian colonialism.

He explained that Azawad consisted of three regions currently part of Mali – Timbuktu, Gao and Kidal.

The MNLA was fighting for the aspirations of the Touareg people and also those of the Songhai, Peuls and Moors.

They had a right to choose their own form of government, to self-determination and, if they so desired, to independence, he said.  

The MNLA is the result of a fusion between the Mouvement National de l’Azawad (MNA), a group of young intellectuals and political activists, and the guerrillas of the former Alliance Touareg Niger Mali (ATNM). 

These elements have now been joined by groups of former Touareg rebels who fled Mali in the 1990s to join the Libyan army and returned to Azawad, with plenty of weaponry, during the NATO war on the Gaddafi regime.

The Vast Minority: Desert rebels fight for free Azawad.