West Africa – The al-Qaeda-affiliated jihadist group Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM) has emerged as the most dangerous militant force across the Sahel, driving an alarming escalation of violence in Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger. On 1 July 2025, JNIM claimed responsibility for a large-scale coordinated assault on seven military bases in western Mali, including areas near the borders with Senegal and Mauritania, underscoring the group’s expanding operational reach and capacity.
Founded in 2017 as a merger of five jihadist factions—including Ansar Dine, Katibat Macina, Al-Mourabitoun, Ansar al-Islam, and the Sahara branch of al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb—JNIM has rapidly evolved into one of Africa’s most lethal terrorist organizations. Its top leaders, Iyad Ag Ghali, a former Malian diplomat and Tuareg rebel commander, and his deputy Amadou Koufa of the Fulani ethnic group, have strategically guided its expansion throughout the Sahel.
Analysts estimate JNIM has recruited thousands of fighters—mainly disaffected youth and impoverished rural populations—capitalizing on widespread unemployment, state failure, and ethnic grievances in one of the world’s poorest regions. The group seeks to impose a strict interpretation of Sharia law in territories under its control, often enforcing harsh rules such as bans on music and smoking, compulsory veiling for women, and punishments in Sharia-style courts, which some see as an alternative to the failing secular judicial systems.
In the first half of 2025 alone, JNIM claimed responsibility for over 280 attacks in Burkina Faso—twice the number recorded in the same period of 2024—resulting in nearly 800 deaths, according to BBC Monitoring. The group also reported killing at least 117 people in Mali and 74 in Benin, highlighting its growing threat across multiple borders. In total, nearly 1,000 fatalities have been linked to JNIM since April 2025, mostly among military personnel and community militias aligned with national governments.
Burkina Faso remains the epicenter of JNIM activity, with operations now active in 11 of the country’s 13 regions. Analysts attribute this to internal divisions within the military, local support for militants, and the group’s ability to exploit community grievances to gain trust and shelter. JNIM’s influence is also growing in Mali and Niger, where successive military coups—fueled in part by the security crisis—have failed to curb the violence.
JNIM has demonstrated tactical sophistication, using improvised explosive devices (IEDs) on major roadways, launching long-range assaults, and raiding military installations to seize weapons. Civilians suspected of cooperating with governments are also being targeted, deepening the humanitarian toll. The group’s access to modern technology has further enhanced its operations, including reported use of Starlink satellite internet systems smuggled through black-market routes, enabling real-time coordination in remote regions beyond traditional telecom networks.
The group’s expansion into coastal West African nations like Benin, Togo, and Côte d’Ivoire has raised alarms about a broader regional destabilization. International observers, including the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime (GI-TOC), warn that JNIM’s footprint is growing as traditional state structures falter, and counterinsurgency operations remain fragmented and under-resourced.
As the international community grapples with conflict fatigue and shifting geopolitical priorities, the rise of JNIM poses a severe threat to West Africa’s stability, economic development, and civilian safety. Without stronger regional cooperation, strategic counter-terrorism support, and investment in community resilience, experts warn the group could entrench itself further, making peace and governance in the Sahel increasingly elusive.
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