"The UK's diplomatic presence in the whole area is extremely small relative to other parts of the world."
3/20/14, "UK 'must do more' to tackle Sahel-Sahara terror threat," BBC
"The UK needs a "bigger footprint" in Mali and other Sahel-Saharan countries to fight extremism, a committee of MPs has said.
It said jihadists had "put down roots" in the region, which was a "new frontline of violent extremism"
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The government welcomed the report and said it was "working" in the region.
The Sahel runs along the south of the Sahara Desert, and the western Sahel-Sahara region includes Mali and Mauritania.
The committee said concerted
international action was needed to tackle the causes of instability and
stop the "contagion of extremism from spreading further".
Committee chairman Sir Richard Ottaway said the UK should "help build indigenous security capacity".
"The withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan provides an opportunity to increase the number of British military training missions in the region," he said.
"A powerful threat from extremism remains throughout the region with no sign yet that African countries would be able to deal with future crises on their own."
Sir Richard told the BBC little had been achieved following the prime minister's promise to tackle insecurity in the Sahara in the wake of last year's Algerian gas plant siege, in which six Britons were killed.
"Economic activity is often desperately low, organised crime is rife, and armed gangs of militants seem able to move almost unchecked across porous national borders," he said.
The committee also found:
- the UK was right to offer practical support for the French-led military intervention in Mali, which helped put the country on a "path back to stability"
- the "young, angry and jobless" in western Sahel-Sahara are "disproportionately at risk of being lured into criminality or religious extremism"
- the region's population is growing "more rapidly than anywhere else in the world"
- there is growing evidence of young people in the region going to "desperate lengths" to leave, with Europe the most popular destination. The committee said the EU lacked a "clear policy" on how to deal with this
'Depth of knowledge'
Sir Richard said the committee had "uncovered a worrying pattern of unsightedness on the part of the UK and others" about events there.
"The Sahara may be a departmental barrier within the Foreign Office but it is not one for terrorists," he said.
"The UK's diplomatic presence in the whole area is extremely small relative to other parts of the world.
"We would urge the UK government to look at expanding its presence and depth of knowledge in relation to the whole region, in view of the foreign policy challenges that lie ahead."" map from BBC
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