African Liberation Forces of Mauritania

African Liberation Forces of Mauritania

The African Liberation Forces of Mauritania (French: Forces de Libération Africaines de Mauritanie, or FLAM) is an exiled paramilitary organization for the Black African minority in Arabo-Berber-dominated Mauritania.

Foundation

FLAM was founded in 1983 as tensions had increased between the two ethnicities following severe political instability and a controversial land reform enacted under Col. Mohamed Khouna Ould Heidalla's military government. The group endorsed, but did not initiate, a violent overthrow of the regime, and was quickly outlawed. In 1986, it published the " [http://www.flamus.net/manifesto.html Manifesto of Oppressed Negro-Mauritanians] ", which detailed government discrimination, and demanded the overthrow of the "Beidane System" (Beidane is an Arabic language-appellation for the Arabophone Moorish elite). Acting as an underground movement in Mauritania, with its main areas of strength in the southern areas of the country (bordering Senegal and Mauritania), and especially among the halpulaar population, FLAM's leadership was headquartered in Dakar and Paris. It remained committed to destroying the "Beidane System", accusing Mauritania's Moorish-dominated governments of instituting a form of "apartheid", and engaged in sporadic, small-scale guerilla operations in the south of the country.

1989 events

Tensions between the group and Heidalla's successor Maaouya Ould Sid'Ahmed Taya increased to a peak in April 1989, when a border dispute with southern neighbor Senegal led to widespread ethnic violence in the racially mixed border areas, as well as a collapse in bilateral relations and intermittent military skirmishing between the two countries. In these so-called "1989 events", tens of thousands of Black Mauritanians (mostly of the halpulaar minority) were forced across the Senegal River; Moors in Senegal fled the opposite way. FLAM received and organized the Mauritanian refugees in Senegal, which bolstered the strength of the movement. With Senegalese backing, the movement intensified its armed struggle with continuous cross-border raids in the Senegal river valley. Violence would not dissipate until 1991-92. Most of the refugees subsequently returned, but over 25,000 Black Mauritanian refugees remained in Senegal, and the events made a lasting mark not only on Mauritanian-Senegalese relations, but also on race relations within Mauritania.

After the 2005 transition

Following the coup d'état of Col. Ely Ould Mohamed Vall in August 2005, the transitional junta stated that the coming elected government would handle the question of resettlement of the refugees once in power. In anticipation of the promised changes, a reformist wing of the FLAM (FLAM-Renovation) split off from the main organization to participate in Mauritania's political transition. The main branch of FLAM has not returned to the country, awaiting settlement of outstanding issues which would, in its view, allow it to play a meaningful part in the political process. The government of Sidi Ould Cheikh Abdellahi, elected in 2007, began preparations to receive the remaining refugees with UNHCR assistance during the summer of that year.

Critics

Because that FLAM are organization base on the Black Race they did not get any intention from the international community.Also the founder of this race-based organization they do not represent all the Mauritania black peoples , since there are three black ethnics in the black minority in Mauritania.

Further reading

*Lance Kinne, "The Benefits of Exile: The Case of FLAM", "The Journal of Modern African Studies", Vol. 39, No. 4. (Dec., 2001), pp. 597-621.

External links

* [http://flamnet.fr.fm/ FLAM Official Site (in French)]
* [http://www.flamus.net/ FLAM Official English-language US site]
** [http://www.flamus.net/multimedia.html FLAM Radio] (Windows Media Player required)


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