French Journalist Kidnapped in the Sahel
from Africa in Transition and Africa Program
from Africa in Transition and Africa Program

French Journalist Kidnapped in the Sahel

Reporters Without Borders Africa Researcher Arnaud Froger watches a video showing what is believed to be French journalist Olivier Dubois, who disappeared last month in Mali's northern city of Gao, in Paris, France on May 5, 2021,
Reporters Without Borders Africa Researcher Arnaud Froger watches a video showing what is believed to be French journalist Olivier Dubois, who disappeared last month in Mali's northern city of Gao, in Paris, France on May 5, 2021, Reuters TV

May 11, 2021 10:20 am (EST)

Reporters Without Borders Africa Researcher Arnaud Froger watches a video showing what is believed to be French journalist Olivier Dubois, who disappeared last month in Mali's northern city of Gao, in Paris, France on May 5, 2021,
Reporters Without Borders Africa Researcher Arnaud Froger watches a video showing what is believed to be French journalist Olivier Dubois, who disappeared last month in Mali's northern city of Gao, in Paris, France on May 5, 2021, Reuters TV
Post
Blog posts represent the views of CFR fellows and staff and not those of CFR, which takes no institutional positions.

In April, Olivier Dubois, an experienced French journalist, was kidnapped in Gao, a Malian city on the Niger River. Though his disappearance was soon known by the Malian and French authorities, and by the non-governmental organization Reporters Without Borders, nobody went public with the crime, ostensibly to facilitate the victim's quick release. Those efforts appear to have failed, and in early May a jihadi group with alleged ties al-Qaeda released a video. In it, the victims pleads with his family and the French authorities to secure his release. The French authorities are seeking to authenticate the video.

This kidnapping follows a familiar pattern. A professional from a rich European country is a high-value target. (French citizens are particularly prized.) A video plea from the victim builds pressure in his or her home country "to do something." Secretive negotiations then lead almost inevitably to ransom being paid by the European government, a professional organization, or the victim's family—perhaps all three. Sometimes, the negotiations fail, and the victim is killed. This becomes more likely if authorities attempt to rescue the victim.

More on:

Mali

Terrorism and Counterterrorism

Violent Nonstate Actors

Media

Sub-Saharan Africa

The perpetrators often are unclear. Many claim to be part of a jihadi group, but others appear to be criminal gangs. At times, a criminal gang carries out the kidnapping and then auctions [PDF] the victim or victims. Who will pay them the most? A government entity or a jihadi group?

The bottom line is that the kidnapping of Europeans or others that are well connected can be hugely profitable. How profitable is the stuff of rumor, because the amounts paid are almost never revealed. (In many European and African countries the payment of ransom is illegal.)

Kidnapping is an important source of funding for terrorist and criminal groups. Compared to other parts of the world, terrorism in the Sahel is inexpensive. Profits from kidnapping could therefore cover most of the costs.

As of May 11, the French journalist has not been released.

More on:

Mali

Terrorism and Counterterrorism

Violent Nonstate Actors

Media

Sub-Saharan Africa

Creative Commons
Creative Commons: Some rights reserved.
Close
This work is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) License.
View License Detail
Close