Rhissa Ag Boula

Rhissa Ag Boula is a Nigerien Tuareg politician and former leader of rebel factions in both the 1990–1995 and the 2007–2009 Tuareg based Insurgencies. He was Nigerien Minister of Tourism from 1996-1999, and again from 1999-2004. His arrest on murder charges in 2004 precipitated armed conflict between his supporters and the Nigerien government. A political leader following the 1995 peace, he again joined a rebel faction from abroad in 2007, creating his own faction from abroad in 2008, and joining the peace process in 2009. In 2010 he was again arrested after returning to Niger.

1990s rebellion and 2000s political leader

Ag Boula was leader of the 1990s Front for the Liberation of Aïr and Azaouak (FLAA), one of the two main rebel groups in the conflict. Rhissa and Mano Dayak became joint leaders of the combined front which negotiated a peace deal with the Nigerien government, the Armed Resistance Organization (ORA).[1] After the 15 April 1995 "Ouagadougou Accords" peace agreement and the 1996 Nigerien coup d'état, Ag Boula continued his political advocacy under coup President Ibrahim Bare Mainassara, and was made Minister of Tourism of Niger from 1997-April 1999. In this role, he advocated for greater international tourism in the Agadez Region.[2][3] Following the 1999 coup and the return to democracy, he was again (1999-2004) appointed Tourism Minister under President Mamadou Tandja. Ag Boula was on the Executive of the Union for Democracy and Social Progress-Amana party from its founding in 1990 until 2005, and party president 2005-2008[4]

2004 arrest

In 2004 he was named as an accomplice in the 26 January murder of ruling MNSD party activist Adam Amangue in Tchirozerine.[5] Ag Boula was sacked as a Minister on 13 February, and on 14 July convicted of ordering the murder by three other men. Beginning in July 2005, several Tuareg former insurgents led by Rhissa's brother Mohamed Ag Boula, began a series of attacks in the north, culminating in the kidnap three Nigerien police officers and one soldier, demanding the release of the former Minister.[6] A Libyan negotiation resulted in the provisional release of Ag Boula in March 2005, a month after the safe release of the hostages.[7][8]

20072009 rebellion

In 2007 a renewed rebellion broke out in northern Niger, in part claiming the 1995 accords were not being honored.[9] Ag Boula at first attempted to mediate on behalf of the rebels from exile in Europe.[10][11] In January 2008 he announced he was joining the rebel movement, provoking condemnation from the government in Niamey.[12] Ag Boula's provisional release on the 2004 charges was withdrawn, and a court convicted him in absentia of murder. On 13 July 2008, a Nigerien court sentenced him to death.[13] In late 2008 Ag Boula announced he was forming his own faction of the rebel movement, the FFR.[14][15] In 2009, the FFR joined the Libyan sponsored peace process that resulted in the May 2009 end of the conflict and a general amnesty for crimes committed in the course of the insurgency.[16]

2010

Following the 18 February 2010 coup d'état against the Nigerien government, Ag Boula and other former rebel leaders returned to Niamey, pressuring the junta to speed up the reintegration of former rebels.[17] On 29 March Ag Boula was arrested in Niamey, along with Kindo Zada, an Army Major who deserted to the rebels in 2007. Both were presumed by the press to investigated for crimes unrelated to the 20072009 rebellion.[18]

On December 4, 2010 charges against him were dismissed by the Criminal Court of Niamey and he was cleared of all suspicion.

2011

In January 2011 Ag Boulsa was elected Regional Councillor of Agadez for a term of four years, and in September 2011 appointed adviser to the President of the Republic, Mahamadou Issoufou.[19]

In September, Ag Boulsa was reported to be seen leading a large convoy entering Niger from Libya consisting of more than a dozen pickup trucks with well-armed Libyan troops.[20] Ag Boulsa denied he was in the convoy.[21]

He is opposed to the rebellion taking place in Mali since January 17, 2012.[22]

See also

References

  1. Visit of a Twareg Leader to the US, Barbara Worley, The Amazigh Voice - Taghect Tamazight Vol. 5, No. 3, June 1996.
  2. Mode africaine en majesté dans le désert. L'Humanité. 26 November 1998.
  3. Photographs and summary of 2004 government posts, including Ministre Délégué auprès du Ministre du Tourisme et de l'Artisanat, Chargé du Tourisme: M Rhissa Ag Boula.
  4. Rhissa Ag Boula. African Development info database.
  5. Former MP fingered in assassination plot. IOL News. 20 February 2004.
  6. NIGER: Five killed as army clashes with Tuaregs in desert north. IRIN (United Nations). 7 Oct 2004.
  7. Tuareg leader freed in Niger. News 24.2005-03-07
  8. Bram Posthumus. Niger: A Long History, a Brief Conflict, an Open Future, in Searching for Peace in Africa, European Centre for Conflict Prevention (1999). ISBN 90-5727-033-1
  9. La crise touareg due à "l'échec" des accords de 1995. Agence France-Presse: 25 August 2007.
  10. Rebels in Niger Threaten More Attacks. Phuong Tran, Voice of America: 21 August 2007.
  11. Uprisings by Tuareg nomads in Mali and Niger. Reuters. 23 September 2007.
  12. Niger rebels vow offensive against uranium industry. Reuters. 31 January 2008.
  13. Niger: Condamnation de Rhissa Ag Boula. Les "hommes bleus" voient rouge. L'Observateur Paalga (Ouagadougou), Zowenmanogo Dieudonné Zoungrana. 16 July 2008.
  14. La rébellion touarègue se divise. RFI 01/06/2008.
  15. Niger: mystère autour de la disparition de l'envoyé spécial de l'ONU. Le Point. 16 December 2008.
  16. Niamey et les rebelles touaregs poursuivent leur dialogue. Reuters. 15 May 2009.
  17. Dissensions au sein de l’ancienne rébellion armée. Habibou Abdou, Le Griffe. 22 March 2010.
  18. Les arrestations se multiplient. Jeune Afrique. 31/03/2010.
  19. "Présidence de la République /Assemblée Nationale : Alambo et Rhissa, conseillers spéciaux". tamtaminfo.com. September 27, 2011. Retrieved October 5, 2011. (French)
  20. Mamane, Dalatou (September 6, 2011). "Niger: Gadhafi security chief enters capital". Associated Press. Retrieved September 6, 2011.
  21. "Un convoi militaire venant de Libye est arrivé au Niger, un chef touareg dément sa présence". Le Point. September 6, 2011. Retrieved October 10, 2011. "I'm not a convoy, I am in Niamey", told AFP Mr Ag Boula in a telephone interview.(French)
  22. "M. Rhissa Boula, conseiller spécial du Président de la République "Il faut éviter que ce conflit malien ne se propage dans tout l’espace saharien"". tamtaminfo.com. June 15, 2012. (French)
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