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The SAHEL Region Border Challenges

About This Webinar

The Sahel region has faced an unprecedented wave of terrorism-related violence, with more than 4,000 deaths reported over the course of the past year. While the broader Sahel region continues to be confronted with serious security challenges, terrorist organizations have expanded their operations in areas such as north and central Mali and Liptako-Gourma, the tri-border area between Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger. The exploitation of local conflicts, porous and remote borders, the absence of or weak levels of governance, high levels of corruption, and the proliferation of illicit activities such as the smuggling of weapons, drugs, motorcycles (and parts), as well as fuel trafficking, cattle rustling, and poaching provide violent extremist groups with financial, operational and human resources. Overall, the propagation of black markets within these areas is indicative of the absence of effective security capacities to protect borders and manage cross-border trade within the wider Sahel region.

Terrorist organizations operating in the region include affiliates of al-Qaida and ISIS, such as Jama’at Nasr al-Islam wal Muslimin (JNIM) and ISIS-Greater Sahara (ISIS-GS), respectively, as well as non-aligned extremist groups. A large majority of violent extremists within the Sahel are recruited from local communities to plan and conduct attacks against government institutions, military facilities, and/or rival organizations. The number of attacks in the wider Sahel region has increased by 250 percent since 2018 . Furthermore, the alliance between violent extremists and criminal organizations within the Sahel fuels a cycle of chronic poverty and violent land disputes, making terrorism an attractive employment opportunity and further contributing to the spread of violence across the region.

While states in the region remain resolute against terrorism, they lack the means and capabilities to contain or degrade the threat on a sustained basis. The G5 Sahel Joint Force (Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania, and Niger), launched in 2017 to coordinate counter-terrorism operations among member states, has potential as a coordination mechanism but has not yet been capable of disrupting the growing terrorist footprint across the wider Sahel region. France’s Operation Barkhane also plays a crucial role in countering terrorist groups and promoting a basic level of security, as does the UN Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali (MINUSMA).

The impact of terrorism within the Sahel region has fostered an environment of massive displacement and perpetual violence. As of June 2020 , approximately 920,000 people have been forced to flee Burkina Faso . Mali and Niger also continue to experience increasing numbers of internally displaced persons, including large numbers of women and children, and more than 7 million Nigerians currently require emergency assistance.

The United Nations Counter-Terrorism Center (UNCCT) within the United Nations Office of Counter-Terrorism (UNOCT), under the framework of its global Border Security Management (BSM) Programme, supports Member States in strengthening border security and management capacities to counter terrorism and stemming the flow of foreign terrorist fighters (FTFs) across land, air, and maritime borders, as well as preventing the cross-border movement of illicit cargo and related transnational crimes, including through enhanced inter-agency and international cooperation.

This webinar, focusing on ‘Border Challenges in the Sahel Region in the Context of Counter-Terrorism and Related Transnational Organized Crime’, aims to virtually delve into the region-specific context and explore threat landscapes, border security and management challenges, and discuss response measures and mechanisms related to countering terrorism and transnational organized crime. The virtual discussions will include presentations from key experts from the region, as well as incorporating the international perspective, and will touch on current threats and the evolving terrorism landscape, the nexus between transnational organized crime and terrorism, main gaps and challenges for border management, and the need for border security strategies, plans of action, and processes that incorporate counter-terrorism components as well as crisis and risk management mechanisms within the current global pandemic context. The webinar will bring together counter-terrorism coordinators, border and law enforcement experts and practitioners from national governments, as well as international experts from the private sector, civil society, academia, and other relevant international, regional and sub-regional organizations to share their experience and ideas for addressing the existing challenges.

OPENING REMARKS: Mr. Ulrik Ahnfeldt-Mollerup, Chief, Countering Terrorism Section, United Nations Counter-Terrorism Centre (UNOCT-UNCCT)

MODERATOR: Ms. Christine Bradley, Programme Manager, United Nations Counter-Terrorism Centre (UNOCT-UNCCT)

SESSION 1: REGIONAL THREAT LANDSCAPE (30 minutes)
- Mr. Marc Vaillant, Regional Programme Coordinator for West Africa, United Nations Office of Counter Terrorism - United Nations Counter-Terrorism Centre (UNOCT-UNCCT)
- Mr. Ludovic-Henry D'Hoore, Regional Coordinator for West and Central Africa, Terrorism Prevention Branch (TPB), United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC)

SESSION 2: BORDER SECURITY AND MANAGEMENT CHALLENGES (30 minutes)
- Ms. Sophie Hoffmann, Programme Manager, Immigration and Border Management Unit (IBM), International Organization for Migrations (IOM) Niger, and
- Mr. Arthur Langouët, Head, Immigration and Border Management Unit (IBM), International Organization for Migrations (IOM) Mali
- Mr. Rocco Messina, Head, Border Security and Management Unit (BSM), United Nations Office of Counter Terrorism - United Nations Counter-Terrorism Centre (UNOCT-UNCCT)

SESSION 3: GLOBAL, REGIONAL, SUB-REGIONAL AND NATIONAL RESPONSE MEASURES (30 minutes)
- Mr. Ahmed Mohamed, Border Security Expert, Counter-Terrorism Directorate, International Criminal Police Organization (INTERPOL)
- Mr. Badreddine El Harti, Principal Security Sector Reform (SSR) and Rule of Law (RoL) Adviser, Office of the Resident Coordinator of the United Nations in Burkina Faso

Agenda
  • OPENING REMARKS
  • REGIONAL THREAT LANDSCAPE
  • BORDER SECURITY AND MANAGEMENT CHALLENGES
  • GLOBAL, REGIONAL, SUB-REGIONAL AND NATIONAL RESPONSE MEASURES
Who can view: Everyone
Webinar Price: Free
Featured Presenters
Webinar hosting presenter
Regional Programme Coordinator for West Africa, United Nations Office of Counter Terrorism - United Nations Counter-Terrorism Centre (UNOCT-UNCCT)
Marc Vaillant joined UNOCT as a Programme Management Officer for West Africa. He was until recently based in Nouakchott, Mauritania. Before joining OCT, Marc served with the UN for nearly 10 years, both as a Programme Officer with the United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS) in New York, Mali, Somalia and Lebanon, as well as a Political Affairs Officer with DPKO’s Africa Division at UNHQ. Prior to joining the UN, he worked for an NGO in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and for the Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Copenhagen. He holds a master degree in geopolitics and international development.
Webinar hosting presenter
Editor Border Security Report / World Security Report
Webinar hosting presenter
Principal SSR-RoL Adviser, UN Special Adviser to the President of Burkina Faso, UN
Badreddine El harti is currently a Principal Rule of Law and Security Institutions Adviser with the United Nations (UNRCO-DPPA) and Special Adviser to the President of Burkina Faso.

Previously, he has been the Deputy, Policy and Doctrine at the UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations in New York (2011-2015). He has served and supported rule of law and security sector governance and reform processes for the United Nations in Haiti, Central African Republic, Libya and Yemen. At a national level, he held senior positions in the defense institution, including chief of CT research and director of joint intelligence training. Badreddine holds a PhD in Humanities from Med fifth University on “Cross cultural communication” (2001), a Master in Strategic Studies from the Air University (2008) in Alabama, US., a Master in defense studies from the Royal Center of high military studies (2009) and an aeronautical engineering diploma (1987).
Webinar hosting presenter
TPB Regional Coordinator, UNODC
Ludovic D’HOORE is currently Regional Coordinator Terrorism Prevention for West and Central Africa, with UNODC’s Terrorism Prevention Branch. He joined TPB in January 2020 and has been based in Dakar, Senegal since then. Mr. D’HOORE joined the United Nations in 2009 to serve as Regional Advisor on AML/CFT for West and Central Africa until 2015. He also served as Programme officer for Asset Recovery work in North African countries under a project implemented by the United Nations Interregional Crime and Justice Research Institute (UNICRI), and more recently on countering Wildlife and Forest Crime in Central Africa where he established the UNODC project office in Libreville, Gabon.
Prior to joining the United Nations Mr D’HOORE served as Legal Advisor to the Belgian Financial Intelligence Unit, and coordinated secretariat services to the Egmont Group of FIUs from 2004-2006. He also worked as policy officer at the Belgian Banking, Finance and Insurance Commission.
Webinar hosting presenter
Border Security Expert, Counter-Terrorism Directorate, INTERPOL
Border Control Security Expert of the INTERPOL Counter Terrorism Directorate
Webinar hosting presenter
Programme Manager, Immigration and Border Management Unit (IBM), IOM
Holder of a degree in Political Sciences from the University of Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, Sophie Hoffmann is working in the field of international development cooperation since 2013.

She started working with the French General Secretariat for European Affairs (SGAE) in the Free Movement of Persons Unit of the Justice and Home Affairs Department, whose role is to coordinate the international handling of European issues on security, visas, immigration and border management under the authority of the French Prime Minister.

She has spent 7 years working with international cooperation agencies and NGOs (GIZ, Handicap International) as operations and program coordinator in Central Africa and Sahel Region, notably in the DRC and Chad, and has integrated the IOM in Niger in November 2018.

Along with the other 24 IOM State Members in West Africa, IOM Niger through its Immigration and Border Management (IBM) unit has been active since 2015 and has been implementing 9 border management projects in Niger. The IBM division of IOM has the institutional responsibility for overseeing activities related to border management solutions and immigration and visa support services. The Division provides assistance to governments in developing, testing and implementing new approaches to address particular migration processing challenges, including the use of biometrics and automated processing solutions. More specifically in Niger, the IBM unit, with its broader scope of activities, is promoting humanitarian border management, integrated border management, the deployment of the Migration Information and Data Analysis System (MIDAS) across the sub-region countries, community engagement, and technical and material capacity building.
Webinar hosting presenter
Senior Expert, United Nations Office of Counter Terrorism - United Nations Counter-Terrorism Center (UNOCT-UNCCT)
Esther Zubiri joined the State Attorney-General’s Office of Spain in 1998 where she has developed her professional career over twenty years as a State Attorney specialized in counter terrorism. She currently works as a senior expert in the United Nations Counter-Terrorism Centre (UNCCT) within the United Nations Office of Counter Terrorism (UNOCT). Formerly, she served as the Chief of Justice, Policy, Legislation and Human Rights (JHRA) at the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) in Afghanistan. In 2012, she was appointed as the Agent of the Kingdom of Spain to the European Court of Human Rights and the Council of Europe, representing Spain at the Committee of Experts on Terrorism (CODEXTER). From 2014 to 2019 she worked as a Senior Legal Specialist at Inter-American Committee against Terrorism of the Organization of American States. As State Attorney Chief she worked at the National Court, the Central Economic-Administrative Court, the State Tax Administration Agency, the Ministries of Interior and Justice and the High Court of Justice of the Basque Country. She served as a counselor at the Permanent Mission of Spain to the United Nations and the Embassy of Spain in the United States of America. She holds a PhD and a Master’s Degree in Law from the Comillas Pontifical University of Madrid (ICADE). She has been awarded with the Merit Cross of the Spanish National Police and the Silver Cross of the Spanish Civil Guard.
Webinar hosting presenter
Ms. Christine Bradley, Programme Manager, United Nations Office of Counter Terrorism - United Nations Counter-Terrorism Centre (UNOCT-UNCCT)
Ms. Bradley is Programme Manager of the global, multi-year Border Security and Management (BSM) Programme at the United Nations Counter-Terrorism Centre (UNCCT) within the United Nations Office of Counter-Terrorism (UNOCT).

Prior to her appointment with UNOCT-UNCCT, Ms. Bradley worked with the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), Regional Office for Eastern Africa, serving as Head of Office and Programme Coordinator for the country programme in Ethiopia. Her work in this regard included leading national projects relating to criminal justice reform, better migration management and countering transnational organized crime and terrorism.

Ms. Bradley’s professional career includes more than twenty years with the Government of Canada working within the fields of border security, migration management, and law enforcement. This includes more than ten years within diplomatic missions managing border security and migration integrity programming in Southern and Eastern Africa and Eastern Europe.

Ms. Bradley holds a postgraduate diploma/M.Litt in Terrorism Studies from the Centre for the Study of Terrorism and Political Violence (CSTPV) at the University of St. Andrews, and a bachelor’s degree in criminology from the University of Calgary, Canada.
Webinar hosting presenter
Head of the Border Security and Management Unit, United Nations Office of Counter Terrorism- United Nations Counter-Terrorism Centre (UNOCT-UNCCT)
Mr. Rocco Messina is the Head of the Border Security and Management Unit at the United Nations Centre for Counter-Terrorism (UNCCT) which is the capacity building branch of the United Nations Office of Counter-Terrorism (UNOCT). Prior to this appointment, Mr. Messina served as Head of the Border Management Section at the United Nations Department of Peace Keeping Operations (DPKO) and the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH), from 2011 to 2017, leading a capacity-building portfolio on Haitian national border policy. His leadership was instrumental to the creation of the Haitian Technical Border Commission, the Customs Police, as well as a specialized branch of the Haitian National Police in charge of securing the land borders. Mr. Messina started his professional career in 1990 after a two-year military police academy training with the Counter-terrorism Branch of the Italian Guardia di Finanza (Italian Military Police). During his 25-year long career he was deployed to several strategic missions, at both national and international levels, focusing mainly on counter-terrorism issues. Between September 2006 and May 2007, Mr. Messina was deployed in Herat Afghanistan with NATO’s International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) Mission as Training Programme Officer, where he developed a training programme for the Afghan Border Police. He also served as a trainer during the same period. Mr. Messina holds a master’s degree in literature and a bachelor’s degree in international law, both from Italian Universities and he speaks English, Spanish and French fluently.
Webinar hosting presenter
Border Security & Management Unit, Countering Terrorism Section, UNCCT
Webinar hosting presenter
Mr. Ulrik Ahnfeldt-Mollerup, Chief, Countering Terrorism Section, United Nations Office of Counter Terrorism - United Nations Counter-Terrorism Centre (UNOCT-UNCCT)
Webinar hosting presenter
Head of Immigration and Border management (IBM) Unit in Mali, IOM Mali
Arthur Langouet, French national, holds a degree in International Relations at Lyon III University and a master’s degree in Internal Human Rights Law and Law of the Armed Conflicts at Paris I Pantheon Assas University (2014).

After working as a legal advisor for the International Committee of the Red Cross and the French Ministry of Defense, Arthur Langouet has served with the International Organization for Migration (IOM - United Nations Migration Agency) in Niger, Bangladesh and Fiji Islands, mainly on community stabilization, prevention of violent extremism and border security projects.

He is now in charge of the Immigration and Border Management Unit of IOM Mali, based in Bamako. IBM projects in Mali focus on improving security at land border posts, build up trust between security forces and border communities, develop the Migration Information and Data Analysis System (MIDAS), as well as responding to the COVID-19 pandemic at borders.
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