Arabs/Tuareg vs. Africans
Arabs/Tuareg Ethnic Clash with Sub-Saharan Africans
Africa is a very tumultuous continent and for a number of reasons. Whether it be fights relating to race, ethnic squabbles, religion or a combination of the three, wars and problems are not hard to find. North Africa in particular and its proximity to the Middle East makes an already hot situation all that much hotter. One particular conflict that is ongoing and protracted in nature is that which exists between the Tuareg Arabs and the blacks in sub-Saharan Africa. They occupy much of the same areas of Niger, Mali, Tunisia, Morocco and Algeria…just to name a few. The problems between the two groups date back at least a thousand years and the wounds run deep for both sides. While there perhaps may be chances for peaceful coexistence in the future, the last thousand years or so will probably prevent that for more centuries to come.
Analysis
Perhaps the main reason that Berbers and blacks in North Africa have been at odds is the fact that the former enslaved the latter for a thousand years with the overall number of black victims of these atrocities numbering nearly 20 million. While the United States abolished slavery in the 1860's during its own civil war, the same did not happen in Mauritania until literally seven years ago in 2007 and it did not start ebbing off until the 1960's. This slavery was so protracted and deep-running that just short a tenth of all Nigeriens were slaves and anywhere from a tenth to a fifth of Mauritanians were as well. The region at large, namely countries like Mali, Niger, Sudan and Chad, have all had very violent uprisings as of late that stratified along ethnic lines. Many who have traveled and know the region will tell anyone who asks how palpable and visceral the animosity is in the area (Van Dyke, 2014).
The most recent of the four countries to have issues would have to be Mali...
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